The candidate’s approach to
the region is hardly a recipe for American ‘greatness.’
Try to imagine what would
happen if Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump decided U.S. policy
toward Asia. U.S. presidential elections almost never hinge on foreign policy,
but it’s worth pondering how a Trump administration might impact the world’s
wealthiest and most populous region given his seeming nationalist-mercantilist
philosophy of governance and transactional view of foreign policy.
What would Asia become if Trump became president?
In short: it would be a disaster.
Although
he gives us only occasional glimpses via impolitic musings, we know several
things about Trump’s orientation toward foreign policy, and Asia in particular.
He believes in having a large, modern, and capable military. He believes in
wielding the threat of force but not so much in the use of it. And he believes
allies—especially Japan and South Korea—free-ride on U.S. commitments, which he
claims has two consequences. One is that Americans are suckers for maintaining
a forward military presence when they don’t need to; the other is that these
allies are “eating our lunch” in trade imbalances and economic growth because
they don’t spend enough on their own defense.
From
these glimpses we can deduce a few major implications for Asia policy. All of
them are disastrous.
First, Trump
would likely withdraw the U.S. military from Asia and instead beef up a
garrison force on U.S. territory, which would have enormous strategic
consequences. Forward military presence does more than just assure allies and
deter aggressors. It enables the United States to respond quickly to a crisis
wherever it may be. If U.S. forces had to fly and sail from the continental
United States to respond when its interests were threatened, it would show up
to everything a day late and a dollar short. One of the central insights from
deterrence literature has been that it’s much harder to reverse an action once
taken than preventing the action in the first place. Yet if the United States
is slow to deploy because of sheer distance, then every expansionist or
revisionist actor in the international system would be able to present us with
faits accompli. This means that if bad guys are conducting preventive strikes,
launching guerrilla wars, conquering territory, or controlling sea lanes near
them, the United States would either have to simply acquiesce, or challenge
them after they’ve secured themselves and attempt to reverse their achievements
at great cost.
Second,
by eliminating U.S. forward presence in Asia, a Trump administration military
would willingly give up escalation control. Although far from an exact science,
escalation control requires being able to engage an adversary in a crisis or
conflict without resorting to total annihilation or nuclear war. The total war
approach was already tried in the form of President Eisenhower’s massive
retaliation doctrine in the 1950s, which planted the seeds of a nuclear-armed
China and North Korea, catalyzed the nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union,
and left the United States ill-equipped to deal with real-world crises and
low-intensity conflict, as repeatedly occurred with China in the 1950s. Even
worse, if your solution to every military problem—no matter how small—is
nuclear annihilation, other countries will eventually stop believing your
threats or you’ll be forced to make good on that nuclear annihilation promise.
Either outcome would be catastrophic.
As a
corollary, if U.S. forces are based at home, then every crisis or conflict
would represent a 21st century version of the massive retaliation doctrine
because no tailored solutions, deterrence forces, or small troop deployments
would be possible, because they’d have to first navigate across the Pacific
Ocean to be relevant, by which time the outcome of a crisis or conflict may
already be decided. A home-based U.S. force could only influence international
outcomes by threatening massive retribution, which would immediately escalate
any situation to an unacceptable and irresponsible level. As China seeks
dominion over the South China Sea—through which $5 trillion of trade passes
each year—a U.S. military absent from the region will have no sway over events.
And if China succeeds in establishing de facto military domination of the South
China Sea, it will be the United States, alongside allies and partners, who
will lose freedom of navigation rights and the ability to engage in global
commerce unencumbered.
Finally,
Trump’s stance toward allies like Japan and South Korea would not simply wreck
those alliances, but destabilize Northeast Asia’s precarious balance. Without a
U.S. alliance, both states are dramatically more likely to develop their own
nuclear weapons, which destroys the possibility of preserving a nuclear
nonproliferation regime, and consequently would make it impossible to prevent
other determined states, like Iran, from going nuclear. And with the United
States walking away from its clear commitments to Japan and South Korea, there
would be no credible prospect of the United States coming to the aid of Taiwan,
where U.S. commitments are more ambiguous. China’s determination to absorb
Taiwan—even against the latter’s will—would face dramatically fewer inhibitions
if China knew Taiwan would not have U.S. backing.
More than
simply abandoning Japan, Trump seems to indicate we would enter a
confrontational phase in U.S.-Japan relations. He blames Japan for not spending
enough on defense, but Japan’s closest neighbors have long been wary of a
militarily “normal” Japan. Without the United States, moreover, a Japan with a
large and advanced military may push South Korea—whose diplomatic relations
with Japan have long been tense—into alignment with China. And although Trump
makes a bogeyman out of U.S. trade imbalances with Japan, he overlooks the fact
that U.S. trade relations with Japan benefit the United States; Toyota, for
example, manufactures cars for the U.S. market in many low-income areas in the
United States, providing tens of thousands of jobs for Americans. Trade
imbalances are an abstraction; jobs are real.
Of South
Korea, Trump asks, “…how long will
we go on defending South Korea from North Korea without payment?” Never mind
that South Korea does share the cost of stationing U.S. troops in South Korea,
that the South does contribute to U.S. security interests around the world, or
that the anti-Americanism in North Korean identity means we’re defending
ourselves from North Korea in addition to the South. Because we maintain a
military presence in South Korea, deterrence has prevailed. Yet Trump says, “…the young man
from North Korea starts acting up…we immediately get our ships going. We get
our aircraft. We get nothing for this.” Avoiding large-scale casualties or
chemical warfare is not “nothing;” it’s peace, however precarious. Perhaps
Trump would prefer to see a second Korean War?
Trump’s
slogan is “Make America great again.” But willfully ceding U.S. global
leadership isn’t greatness. Abandoning the global liberal order to others isn’t
greatness. Allowing large-scale atrocities or the end of a generation of peace
in Asia when you have the ability to prevent it isn’t greatness. And neither is
reneging on U.S. commitments. Far from being “great,” Trump’s Asia policy is
morally, economically, and strategically unconscionable. By Van
Jackson for The Diplomat
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