NATO, the Cold War military
alliance that institutionalized US and Europe’s security ties, is increasingly
under fire as an aggressive and autocratic Turkey becomes a liability and continues to damage the brand
name of the “value-based” alliance. Additionally, the timing of the EU
presenting a new China strategy around the time Britons opted for Brexit was
unfortunate. An EU without Britain—which is still a NATO ally as well as a
permanent member of the UN Security Council—may become less of a coherent
partner for the US on transatlantic issues.
Will that lead US-EU relations
to face a calm demise?
Perhaps
not, and an unlikely actor may actually be a catalyst to strengthen transatlantic
relations—China.
With the threat of terrorism in the
Middle East increasingly merging with the need to protect China’s citizens and
interests abroad, a unique diplomatic opportunity has presented itself for the
US and EU to engage China. And the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) may be the answer.
In 2011, Beijing had to evacuate
36,000 Chinese nationals when NATO began bombing Libya, and in 2015 it
conducted two more evacuations in Yemen
when the US/Saudi Arabia began their bombing campaign. With an estimated five
million workers abroad and outbound tourists reaching 109 million in 2014,
protecting Chinese citizens is a dire challenge for Beijing. As the Middle
Kingdom begins to adopt a more robust security posture overseas, it could
become an important security partner for the US and EU in Eurasia.
“East vs. West” legacy institutions
Given that legacy institutions from
the Cold War have built-in bias (e.g. NATO has a tendency to be suspicious
of Russia, and China still harbors distrust of NATO due to the 1999 bombing
of its embassy in Belgrade) the OSCE may be a timely alternative paradigm for
global engagement between the West and rising powers.
This is especially important with an
EU post-Brexit and NATO as an exclusive military alliance ill-equipped to
address new security challenges such as counter-terrorism, refugee crises,
conflict prevention and resolution. In contrast, the OSCE is an inclusive
dialogue and confidence-building mechanism with 57 members including the EU,
Britain, US, Russia, and countries across Eurasia. Its explicit mandate on
security could stimulate a structural dialogue with China, especially with the
2017 Austrian Chairmanship’s priority on
counter-terrorism that converges with China’s foreign policy focus.
During the Cold War, NATO took
center stage to address conventional warfare and OSCE was in a supporting role.
However, in the post-Cold War 21st century environment of unconventional
warfare and new security challenges, it is important to have a paradigm shift
so that now OSCE should take center stage with NATO having a supporting role.
Dialogue, confidence building, and crisis management—rather than military
power—should lead modern diplomacy. Only when diplomacy via OSCE fails should
the west than resort to NATO.
Unless the EU and especially the US
learn to adapt to changes and not get stuck in legacy institutions and
anachronistic paradigms, the transatlantic rift will widen. Indeed,
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier penned an article
in August calling for the OSCE to take a role in launching a dialogue with the
Russians to reduce tensions, with NATO
itself issuing an article in November on the same notion for crisis management.
After sixteen years of slumber, the
OSCE seems poised to take the center stage as the new vehicle to strengthen
transatlantic relations and a new platform to engage not only Russia, but also
China.
“West and Rising Rest” institutions
In an increasingly multi-polar
world, this could also mean a multi-partner world to address new security
challenges. As such, rather than viewing China’s rise as a security actor
through a cold war mentality of “East vs. West,” this can be changed to a
narrative of aligning “the West and the rising rest” against a shared
civilizational threat by international terrorism. In this light, Syria could
present a good test case and laboratory for dialogue and realignment in the
Middle East, given current US support for anti-Chinese
militants in the Syrian opposition is a potentially explosive issue
in Sino-US relations.
Since Sino-US relations are a
key pillar of any future global system, but continue to be plagued by
underlying competition, German-led EU and Austrian Chairmanship in OSCE can
perhaps play an important mediating role between the US and China. OSCE is also
a timely platform to help reduce current tension between Russia and the West—as
it was initially conceived as a forum to mitigate tensions between NATO and the
Warsaw Pact.
In addition to engaging China on
security issues, the OSCE can also facilitate Eurasian connectivity via the One
Belt, One Road (OBOR) initiatives. Indeed during the 2016 German chairmanship,
Berlin invited a Chinese delegation to attend the OSCE business conference in
Berlin on 18-19 May
to promote connectivity on the OBOR. The 2017 Austrian chairmanship offers the
prospect of further dialogue with China regarding counter-terrorism on the
OBOR.
The rise of unconventional
challenges requires “out-of-the-box” thinking for solutions. As China rises as
a security actor in the Middle East, this could provide a unique opportunity
for transatlantic cooperation with new and unconventional partners.
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