New
Great Game: US Wants Russia To Help Contain China – Analysis
President
Donald Trump’s overtures to President Vladimir Putin, while starting a tariff
war with China, has the strategic community reminiscing about a time when it
was all so different. During the Cold War, America had diplomatically aligned
itself with China to counter the Soviet threat. Today, except that the US,
Russia and China are now entangled on the grand chessboard, the forces
underpinning the current environment and its actors are different from the Cold
War period. The current power play is rooted in geo-economics where all the
actors are interconnected, unlike during the Cold War, when ideological reasons
characterised relations and the two superpowers did not share economic
interests.
During the Cold War, the
Soviet Union expanded into Central Asia and was poised to reach the Indian
Ocean. On the Pacific side, China had become a bulwark of communism,
influencing East and South-East Asia. Thus, the Sino-Soviet combine became the
major threatening force, affecting the global balance of power. Among western
powers, the US at that time was the sole major military power, as Europe and
Japan were still recuperating from World War II. Direct military confrontation
in this situation was not an ideal choice for the US, or for that matter either
side, owing to the destructive potential of nuclear weapons put on hair-trigger
alert.
The opportune moment came
in the form of Sino-Soviet rivalry, weakening that bloc and allowing the US to
mount a diplomatic offensive. Henry Kissinger’s secret visit to China and the
subsequent visit of President Nixon revived US-China diplomatic relations.
These relations became stronger with Deng Xiaoping assuming the leadership of
China and setting the country on a course towards economic modernisation. The
China that stands today as an economic giant is essentially the outcome of this
policy. Thus began the golden period of American unipolar moment with a
politically and economically weaker Russia, and a China yet to become
assertive.
The 2008 global financial
crisis changed this setting and China’s confidence in its economic power began
to feed its geopolitical interests, pronounced under ‘core interests’. The
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank had attracted partners from Asia and
Europe, including America’s allies. Today, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)
has become the flagship initiative that symbolises China’s economic might. The
road and communications infrastructure across Eurasia marked the first major
attempt by a land power to make inroads into Central Asia after the fall of the
Soviet Union. Simultaneously, China is building ports and naval bases overseas
(Djibouti to start with), while deploying its warships in the Pacific and
Indian Oceans.
Recalling the ‘Great Game’,
British strategist Halford Mackinder underscored Russia’s potential to control
Eurasia, from which it would reach the warm water ports of the Indian Ocean and
start assembling a massive naval fleet. This would undermine the security and
sovereignty of maritime nations such as Britain. Therefore, Britain’s
colonisation of Asia and the US Cold War policy concentrated on controlling the
rimland between Eurasia and Indian and Pacific Oceans. Mackinder, however, did
not undermine China’s potential. Today, China has access to warm water ports in
the Western Pacific, which it is trying to control unilaterally by
commissioning warships on an industrial scale. Combine the road and rail
infrastructure overland across Eurasia and naval ambitions in the Indo-Pacific,
and it becomes evident that China is marching towards Eurasian hegemony, while
denying the maritime nations the ability to control the rimland.
The threat is clear and the
US administration under President Obama had decided to position 60 per cent of
its military assets in the Indo-Pacific. US-India relations began to improve
and military exercises such as RIMPAC and MALABAR began to assume greater
salience. However, working with Russia for possible containment of China and
simultaneously confronting it on unfair trade practices proved a greater
challenge for Washington’s traditional policy elite. As a result, the Trump
administration is engaging with Russia and North Korea diplomatically and
raising tariffs on China’s exports to the US. The result of these efforts is
dependent on the recognition of the current China threat rather than that of
the Cold War imaginations within US strategic circles. Henry Kissinger’s advice
to Trump to engage with Russia assumes significance in this context.
The question is will Russia
comply? Russia sees major incentives to engage with China which includes trade,
infrastructure and mutual assurances on spheres of influence. China’s BRI
projects across Central Asia benefits Russia, given its geographic position.
China is a major buyer of Russia’s oil, gas and defence equipment and both
sides share the aversion to the western democratic, liberal world order. Russia
and China are also acutely aware of the consequences and outcome of the Cold
War Sino-Soviet split. However, the US believes that the strategic
undercurrents of power and influence over Eurasia will render the same fate to
the next iteration of Sino-Soviet relationship. Therefore, whether Russia
remains a partner of China creating a new dynamic or confronts its influence
across Eurasia, leading to a split again, will be the deciding factor in the
global balance of power.
This article originally
appeared in DNA By Observer
Research Foundation
By Vidya Sagar Reddy Avuthu
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