International
relations experts have noted that neighboring states typically engage in
balancing behavior against a would-be regional hegemonic power. That response
would seem to be instinctively logical. Any power that attempts to dominate a
region is likely to appear threatening to neighboring states. Their natural
response is to try to counter the strength of that emerging hegemon and, if
possible, to band together with like-minded neighbors for such a strategy. As I
have written elsewhere, the behavior of Japan, India,
Vietnam and other countries in Asia regarding China’s growing clout fits that
pattern.
But balancing is the usual response of
large and midsize powers. For small, relatively weak countries, the choice may
be more complex and difficult. In some cases, there may be a greater incentive
to appease the emerging hegemon, to bandwagon with it, rather than seek to
balance it. The recent behavior of two countries in East Asia, the Philippines and Malaysia, is consistent with a bandwagoning
strategy.
Early on in his tenure as Philippines
president, Rodrigo Duterte stated bluntly that Manila’s foreign policy would
not necessarily follow Washington’s wishes, despite the existence of the
longstanding bilateral security alliance. Although U.S. policymakers initially
thought that statement might be just for domestic consumption to placate
hypersensitive Philippine nationalists, they quickly discovered that they were
dealing with a leader determined to pursue his own policy agenda.
Duterte went on to indicate that he wished
to work with both Russia and China, adding that that there would be no further
military exercises with U.S. forces because such actions angered China. Then in
October, he was in Beijing concluding an agreement with China (in exchange for
a $24 billion aid package), and stating that it was China, Russia, and the
Philippines against the world. He later tried to walk
back some of his dramatic moves, insisting, for example, that the much-touted
separation from the United States was only from U.S. foreign policy, not a severance of the entire relationship.
Apparently he would still like his country to enjoy the protection of the U.S.
military alliance in the event of trouble. And he would like to preserve a
robust economic relationship with America.
But Duterte’s actions make clear that he
believes that China is now at least as important a player as the United States
for his country. He is no longer willing to have the Philippines be a convenient
forward staging area for the U.S. military and a geostrategic pawn in a
containment policy directed against China.
The Malaysian government has not been as
ostentatious as the Philippines in its rapprochement with Beijing, but the
actions of Premier Najib Razak certainly suggest a policy tilt toward China.
During a six-day visit to Beijing in late October and early November, Razak
signed 14 economic agreements worth $34.25 billion. In
addition, his position on the territorial disputes in the South China Sea is
that they should be addressed through “dialogue”—essentially echoing Beijing’s
preferred approach. If those actions were not enough to hint at a growing
Sinophilic orientation, Razak bluntly rebuked Western powers that had
criticized his rapprochement with China—especially those countries, he charged,
that had previously exploited populations in the region as colonial masters.
The question naturally arises: why are we
seeing manifestations of a bandwagoning strategy now? There are a number of
possible factors. The recognition of China’s growing power and a belief among
some smaller states that attempting to counter it is both more hazardous and
costly than learning to live with it. Another consideration is possible
resentment against the United States and its allies as the incumbent hegemonic
network. That certainly seemed to be the import of Razak’s comments.
And finally, there may be fading
confidence in Washington’s willingness and ability to protect small security
clients in East Asia. Christopher Layne’s recent excellent piece in this publication
documented the perils of extended deterrence with regard to nuclear weapons.
But extended deterrence—protecting third parties—is hard even at the
non-nuclear level. Small client states have reason to wonder whether the United
States would risk war with China to defend them from attack, much less to risk
an armed conflict to back their positions on some lesser matter such as
territorial claims in the South China Sea. Indeed, they might wonder whether
the United States would be willing to jeopardize its overall relationship with
China—America’s largest trading partner and the holder of nearly $1.2 trillion
in U.S. Treasury debt—to back some minor client.
A bandwagoning strategy may make sense to
an Asian nation caught in that position. The good news for Washington is that
such behavior is likely to be confined to small states. Large powers like Japan
and India seem firmly wedded to a balancing strategy. And when it comes to
international power relationships, those are the countries that truly matter.
Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior
fellow in defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute and a
contributing editor at The National Interest, is the author of 10 books, the
contributing editor of 10 books, and the author of more than 650 articles on
international affairs.
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