America’s Grand Strategy Toward Asia And Role
Of South China Sea – Analysis
Many policy makers and analysts agree that there is
a surging soft and hard power struggle between China and the U.S. for dominance
in the South China Sea –and Southeast Asia. But as tension
mounts, the U.S. seems to be in a quandary as to what to do. Some argue
strongly that the U.S. should militarily confront China there –now. Others
argue just as strenuously that it would not be in the U.S. national interest to
do so – not now anyway, and not over disputed flyspecks and resources in the
South China Sea in which it has no direct stake. But before making
that critical policy decision, the U.S. should have a grand strategy for Asia
and determine the role of the South China Sea in it. But what are
the U.S. goals in Asia and does it have a ‘grand strategy’ to achieve
them?
If so, what are they, and what is the role of the
South China Sea’?
First some context. The US-China struggle for control of the
South China Sea is symptomatic of much deeper differences –in effect
a “clash of civilizations According to the originator of this
theory, Samuel Huntington, human conflict has transitioned to a new phase in
which formerly dominated, abused and exploited cultures and nations of the
non-Western world have increasingly become significant players in the shaping
of the international order. The Sinic culture led by China is prominent among
them. China President Xi Jinping has explicitly recognized this
fundamental divergence of cultural identities and world views. Indeed,
he has encouraged a rejection of Western influence and implicitly of Western
models. According to Xi, ‘many aspects of China’s modernization
process must have Chinese characteristics and the Chinese Communist Party must
provide guidance on every aspect of human behavior’. .
This possibly existential contest between it and the West –led by the
U.S. –is being played out in the South China Sea. The U.S. is
clearly the superior military power—overall –and in the South China Sea.
However, China is rapidly eroding the US military advantage
there. China also seems to be gaining the soft power advantage by
virtue of its geographic position as a permanent part of Asia, and its
burgeoning economic largesse. Indeed, according to Kurt Campbell and Rush
Doshi, the U.S. , seems to be “needlessly confrontational without being
sufficiently competitive” regarding China and the South China Sea
The broad U.S. policy alternatives seem to range from ‘share power’– as
proposed by Xi ‘confront’; or ‘engage but hedge’ and hope “China will
become a liberal democracy, or at least accept a subordinate place in the
American-led international order.” However, the latter is unlikely to happen.
As Lee Kuan Yu once put it, China wants to be “accepted as China,
not as an honorary member of the West”.
To share power in the region, the U.S. would have to accommodate to some
degree China’s international interests and aspirations–when, on what issues,
how, and how much would have to be negotiated with China. But the U.S. has no
history or precedent of willingly sharing power and it is not likely to start
in the Trump administration. As prominent Australian analyst Hugh
White says, “the US policy community has, with few exceptions, failed so far to
understand the nature or the scale of the challenge it faces in negotiating [a]
new relationship with China. for confrontation, White argues, Washington
has shown “no appetite for engaging in a confrontation with China” in its own
backyard where it might take heavy losses and not win quickly or outright”.
None of these policy alternatives seems to be viable. Moreover, choosing
one or a combination thereof would be premature and temporary– unless and until
a grand strategy is determined. The U.S. is still searching for a ‘new’
one. Meanwhile, by default, the existing grand strategy remains a
continuation of historical components.
According to Michael Green, the former senior director for Asia policy
at the US National Security Council, the driving forces of US Asia policy have
always been a balance of faith, commerce, geography and
self-defense.
The fundamental central theme of US strategy towards Asia has been “_ _
opposition to any other power exercising exclusive hegemonic control over Asia
_ _”. This has now been incorporated in the “Free and Open Indo-Pacific”
concept by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
And this is what the U.S. thinks China is attempting to achieve in the
South China Sea–through revising the ‘international order’ there– and this is
why the South China Sea is so ideationally important to the U.S.
Another reason for the importance of the South China Sea to the U.S. is
the location and nature of its ‘defensive line’ in Asia. Such a defensive line
has been a main component of US strategy in Asia throughout its history.
A major current question for US South China Sea policy is where to draw
its defensive line vis a vis China. Should it be closer to Asia, closer to
Hawaii or stay more or less where it is – along the First Island Chain
(Japan-Taiwan-the Philippines-East Malaysia – Indonesia) and then north to
Vietnam. If it is to be closer to China, then the U.S. would have to confront
China in the South China Sea.
But even before the U.S. determines its goals and grand strategy, sets
the location of its defensive line and derives its policy and tactics there
from, some argue that it first needs to define its current “essential US
foreign policy issues in Asia”
What are ‘essential foreign policy issues for the
U.S.? According to Stephen G. Brooks, these should include the
assurance “_ _that none of the ‘core territory’ of its allies is ever lost to
China _ _.” To him, core territory does not include
the resources and rocks in the South China Sea. It must also ensure
that “China cannot interrupt the flow of seaborne commerce over the long term”
by retaining the option to undertake a distant blockade of China to force it to
reverse course” or by denying China control of the South and East China
Sea. This is also part of the “Free and Open
Indo-Pacific” concept.
For Kurt Campbell and Rush Doshi, the fundament for a consistent,
unified, successful grand strategy is “clarity of purpose” and the “deliberate
identification of ends, ways, and means.” Most important in the construction of
a ‘new’ grand strategy, the U.S. first needs to determine what it must have
and what it merely prefers –particularly regarding the South
China Sea. Indeed, as policy analysts Robert Manning and James Pryzstup argue,
the U.S. needs to come to terms with the “great strategic question of our time:
what Chinese role in the Asia-Pacific can it live with”?
But so far the Trump administration seems to lack the focus and
discipline to accomplish this. So the US strategy and policy
regarding its role in Asia and the South China Sea remains a ‘work in
progress’.
*Mark J. Valencia, Adjunct Senior Scholar,
National Institute for South China Sea Studies, Haikou, China
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