The
‘China Threat ‘emerging in 2018 in comprehensive and diverse
manifestations poses an existential crisis challenging not only the continuance
of United States as the global unipolar Superpower but also targeted with
intended consequences of prompting the United States to retreat into isolation
within its continental confines.
The United States has long ignored the China Threat to the detriment of
United States own national security but also to the security of US Allies and
strategic partners. The acid test of a nations’ strategic greatness lies not
only in checkmating a threat in existence to its national security but also
being vigilant to a ‘Threat in the Making’, as I would put it. The United
States is guilty of the latter in relation to China.
China has reached this stage of posing a potent existential challenge to
the United States mainly due to United States own acts of strategic omission
and commission. United States misreading of China’s long range intentions has
not only facilitated the emergence of a China Threat to United States but also
United States permissive attitudes on China facilitated to create two ‘rogue
nuclear weapons state’ of Pakistan and North Korea as its proxy cats-paws
against US Allies and strategic partners.
China is unlikely to succeed in achieving ‘strategic equivalence’ that
it seeks with the United States in the foreseeable future nor are the Major
Powers of the world, including Japan and India, likely to accede ‘American
Exceptionalism’ to China despite its burgeoning military power. This for the
simple reason that I have been stressing in my writings for two decades and
that is China has no Natural Allies like the United States.
For detailed analysis on the subject, kindly read my Book, “China-India
Military Confrontation: 21st Century Perspectives” (2015) Chapter 13
‘China’s Giant Leap for Superpower Status in 21st Century:
Geopolitical Implications’.
However, China will in the 21st Century with great
persistence, and unmindful of the prevailing reality, that China is besieged
today from both within and without, China will continue to challenge United
States global predominance and specifically Indo Pacific predominance with
greater potency.
The United States has belatedly woken upto the reality that what they
attempted to market globally for decades that China can be co-opted as a
responsible stakeholder in global security and stability was a mirage. Long
years of United States ‘China Hedging Strategy’ and ‘Risk Aversion Strategy’
made China only more recalcitrant and fed Chinese misperceptions that United
States global power is on the decline.
United States policy formulations of this decade of a ‘Strategic Pivot
to Asia Pacific’ and the recent emphasis on Indo Pacific Security Blueprint are
seemingly belated but welcome steps to checkmate China’s unrestrained flexing
of its military muscle as evident in the South China Sea.
Chinese President Xi Jinping’s call on Chinese Armed Forces to prepare
for an all- out war are not defensive calls by a besieged nation but like
Hitlerian Germany, these are offensive calls of a revisionist power. Annexation
of Taiwan by use of military force seems to be China’s aim today. This has a
larger aim of challenging United States resolve and determination to maintain
its Superpower status. China has placed the United States on the horns of a
strategic dilemma where the United States will be damned if it does not
militarily intervene to defend Taiwan and if it does so it risks a full-fledged
war with China. China is gambling on the United States shying away from the
latter option.
Right from the turnover of the 19th Century till today no
major power, not even Nazi Germany, has dared to challenge the United States
predominance, geopolitically and strategically, as China is now engaged in
doing so.
Even at the height of the Cold War 1945-91 when the United States and
the Former Soviet Union were involved in a bitter ideological struggle one did
not witness the unfolding of the type of China’s ‘Grand Strategy Blueprint’
decades in the making and operationalising, to initially unravel United States
security architecture in Asia Pacific, and graduated now to a more
vividly clear reality in 2019 that China is on the avowed path of emerging as
the ‘sole challenger ‘of United States predominance and exceptionalism.
That China could geopolitically and strategically engage in the
execution of such a blueprint unchallenged arose fundamentally from United
States flawed policy decisions spread over many US Administrations. Such
flawed US policy decisions sprung from misconceived American readings of
China’s long range strategic intentions and short-term American geopolitical
expediency subjugating and distorting United States strategic vision of the
‘China Threat’ to United States national security.
The United States ‘original sin’ in relation to the latent China Threat
to US national security can be placed on shoulders of US President Truman who
ignored General MacArthur’s dire warnings on China and petulantly dismissed
General MacArthur from the command of UN Forces in Korea. If Japan today after
decades since 1945 continues as the United States most enduring and steadfast
Ally, it has a lot to do with General MacArthur’s visionary zeal.
The second most serious sin in relation to flawed US policy decisions
was inflicted by US President Richard Nixon in 1972 egged by his Sinophiles
Secretary of States Henry Kissinger. To spite the Former USSR the United States
in 1972 endowed an unwarranted international legitimacy on China despite its
disruptive credentials and thereafter followed as to what could be termed as a
China Appeasement policy.
The third sin was committed at the turn of the Millennium when US
President Bush in his messianic zeal to tame President Saddam’s Iraq left
untended both Afghanistan and more significantly Asia Pacific security. China
made full use of the decade ending 2010 for its exponential military power
expansion and with emphasis on a well-calibrated buildup of Chinese naval power
for ‘naval operations in distant seas’.
China’s latest strategic-economic enterprises of One Belt One Road and
Maritime Silk Route are nothing but an attempt to control maritime chokepoints
along the global commons to United States disadvantage and as strategic
pressure points against regional peer competitors.
China could not have emerged as a Major Power with threatening contours
but for the United States munificence strategically and economically by massive
infusions of FDI in the vain hope that the vast Chinese market would be open
for US investors. The situation in 2018 is that with massive economic growth
rates fuelled by United Sates it was possible for China to build up a
threatening military profile. Unlike Japan and South Korea similarly built up
by the United States have continued as enduring Allies of the United States the
picture presented by China is the opposite. China has ungratefully turned into
a ‘China Threat’ militarily and economically against the United States. Hence
US President Trump being forced into initiating trade wars with China.
Contextually, what are the United States options available to the United
States to checkmate the serious potent existential crisis heaped by China?
Since the China Threat to the United States encompasses the entire spectrum
ranging from geopolitical, strategic, military, economic and technological, the
United States has to come out with a matching blueprint encompassing this
entire spectrum.
Contextually therefore, imperatives exist for the United States to
exhibit a national will to checkmate China without hedging and with a clear
vision that China in its present mould and configuration offers no scope to the
United States that China will emerge as a responsible stakeholder in global
security and stability. China’s national aspirations clash with United States
continuance as the unipolar Superpower.
Geopolitically, if the China Threat to the United States is to be
diluted then the United States has to reset its Russia-policy formulations.
Washington has to decide that in its 21st Century strategic
perspectives which is the greater and more potent threat to United States
national security—China or Russia? Even if the United States perceives both
China and Russia as threats to US security, then too, the United States has to
decide whether it would be profitable to wean away Russia from its strategic
nexus with China or the other way around?
Strategically, no US President in view of unfolding global landscape can
tamper with diluting or dispensing with security mechanisms and security
alliances crafted since 1945 and which have proved to be in good stead for the
United States——NATO and its bilateral spider- web of military alliances with
countries of the Asia Pacific and Australia. To reinforce and ensure the
longevity of these security architectures, the higher call is on the United
States.
In relation to the China Threat, as I have advocated in my earlier
Papers the United States must not only confine its Forward Military Presence in
Japan and South Korea but also establish a similar Forward Military Presence in
Afghanistan. The latter would enable the United States to have a military
presence on the ringside of Heartland Asia
Militarily, the United States should not only maintain its cutting edge
in military superiority over China and Russia but also cater for advanced weapon
systems being introduced by China and Russia. Cyberwarfare and Space Warfare
are two spheres where China is attempting to displace the United States.
China has virtually edged out the United Sates from the vast South China
Sea maritime expanse and in a position to interdict US Navy deployment in the
Western Pacific. Its marked increase in intrusive presence in the Indian Ocean
has similar designs in mind. The United States needs to lay emphasis on the
naval capacity building of South East Asian Navies and integrate India and
Japan in the overall maintenance of ‘freedom of the high seas and the airspace
above them’.
US President has initiated a trade war with China to remedy the gigantic
lopsided imbalance in US trade deficits with China. Short of war, the United
States can certainly tame China’s brinkmanship and aggressive instincts through
restrictive trade practices not applied on China by preceding US Administrations.
China has for decades been misappropriating advanced technologies of the
United States by intellectual property thefts, forcing US companies to share
advanced technologies with China in return for trade openings and by placing
Chinese researchers in US centres of technological excellence thereby enabling
unrestricted access to advanced US technologies.
In Conclusion, it needs to be strongly stressed that the United States
learning from its past misreading of China’s long range intentions recognises
at least in 2019 that the China Threat to United States national security and
to the security of its Allies and vital strategic partners is real and no
complacency on this score will historically be forgiven.
SAAG
By Dr Subhash Kapila
No comments:
Post a Comment