The Obama administration’s foreign
policy energies are fully engaged in the Middle East — negotiating the Iran
deal, sending Special Operations forces into Iraq, supporting Saudi airstrikes
in Yemen, working with the Syrian rebels. Whatever happened to the pivot to
Asia?
Remember, the basic argument behind the pivot was that
the United States was overinvested in the Middle East, a crisis-prone region of
dwindling importance to the U.S. national interest. Asia, on the other hand, is
the future. Of the four largest economies, three are in Asia, if measured by
purchasing-power parity. As Singapore’s late leader Lee Kuan Yew often told me,
“America will remain the world’s dominant power in the 21st century only if it
is the dominant Pacific power.”
And yet the United States is up to its neck once more
in the Middle Eastern morass. President Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry
spend little time in Asia. Few new initiatives have been announced. Despite the
deal on “fast-track” authority, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade agreement
that was at the heart of the pivot, faces congressional opposition, mostly from
the president’s own party. The administration lobbied hard to get its closest
allies to spurn China’s new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, only to be
rebuffed by everyone — even Britain.
The stability of the world will not rest on whether
the Houthis win or lose in Yemen. (Yemen has been in a state of almost constant
conflict since 1962.) It will be shaped by how the world’s established
superpower handles the rising one, China. As Harvard’s Graham Allison has
noted, of the 15 cases since 1500 where this transition has taken place, 11
times the result was a war.
Most of the attention of the pivot has been focused on
deterring China. This is a necessary and important component of maintaining
peace and stability. That’s why the United States has wisely and properly
enhanced its security cooperation with Japan, Australia, the Philippines and
other countries.
But an excellent new academic volume, “The Next Great
War?: The Roots of World War I and the Risk of US-China Conflict,” co-edited by
Richard Rosecrance and Steven Miller, highlights that, in addition to
deterrence, the United States also needs to work hard at cooperation — at
integrating China into the global system.
On this front, Washington gets poor marks so far.
China is now the world’s second-largest economy — the largest measured by
purchasing-power parity. And yet, its voting share in the International
Monetary Fund is equivalent to that of the Netherlands and Belgium combined.
Congress — mostly because of Republican opposition — refuses to pass
legislation that would change this, even though it would not reduce America’s
voting share in the IMF.
The Obama administration’s opposition to the Asian
infrastructure bank was, quite simply, dumb. The bank is one more way to fund
infrastructure projects in Asia — where the need for more money for such
projects is immense. If China can’t set up a regional bank to fund bridges,
what influence is it legitimately allowed to have? Of course, having chosen to
oppose the bank, the Obama administration then ended up with the worst of all
worlds — being defeated in its ill-chosen fight.
China has a strategy for now: economic development
within the international system and a steadily enlarging sphere of influence in
the region. In an interview this week with the Financial Times’ Lionel Barber,
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang sounded remarkably conciliatory and cooperative. Yet
his government is reclaiming land and building an airstrip on the disputed
Spratly Islands, creating what the Pentagon has called “facts on the water,”
according to the New York Times.
Washington has a strong hand. It remains the dominant
rule-setting power in a way that really has never existed in history. It is militarily
in a league of its own. It has more than 50 treaty allies. China has North
Korea. But some of this can cause its own problems. Rosecrance points out that
allies can be both a blessing and a complication. It was the many smaller
allies doing foolish things that dragged the major powers into World War I. The
declining Habsburg Empire’s recklessness might well be the most important cause
of that war. Could a Japan that is slowly sliding downward (and has a
dysfunctional, hostile relationship with China) play a similar role in the
future? Rosecrance simply cautions that the United States keep in mind that its
interests are never identical with those of its allies.
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