US-China Relations (3rd Ed)

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US-China Relations (3rd Ed) Page 48

by Robert G Sutter


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  There were some efforts to further assuage Southeast Asian partners. Vice

  President Pence visited Indonesia in April and told officials that President

  Trump would attend the upcoming US–ASEAN and East Asian summits in

  the Philippines, as well as the APEC summit in Vietnam scheduled for No-

  vember 2017. The vice president’s stop in Australia was broadly reassuring,

  but administration commentary devoted little attention to the troubled US

  alliances with the Philippines and Thailand.

  At the end of April 2017, President Trump called leaders of Singapore,

  the Philippines, and Thailand. Inviting the latter two to visit the White House represented a break from the Obama government’s arms-length treatment of

  both governments on human rights grounds. But the president then left town

  after the House of Representatives passed its controversial health care bill.

  He was at his estate in New Jersey and unavailable to meet with ASEAN

  foreign ministers visiting Washington that week.

  On the South China Sea disputes, the Trump government followed a

  cautious approach. It waited until late May 2017 to allow a freedom-of-

  navigation exercise to take place by a US Navy ship targeted against land

  features claimed by the Chinese—a claim that had been deemed illegal by an

  international tribunal in 2016. In Indonesia, Pence repeated the administra-

  tion’s insistence on so-called fair trade with Indonesia, one of many Asian

  countries whose trade surplus with the United States placed them under

  review by the new administration.

  Human rights issues in Southeast Asia—ranging from authoritarian

  strong-man rule in Cambodia and Communist dominance in Vietnam to the

  newly democratic Myanmar government’s controversial crackdown on the

  oppressed Rohingya community—have received much less attention from

  the Trump government than from previous administrations. Recent presiden-

  tial invitations to Philippine and Thai leaders underlined this new US prag-

  matism on human rights issues.

  Southeast Asian and other Asia-Pacific officials were correct in com-

  plaining that they had few counterparts in the Trump government, particular-

  ly in the State and Defense departments, due to the administration’s remark-

  able slowness in nominating appointees. Some governments, notably Viet-

  nam, made the best of the situation, carrying out agreed-upon visits from

  senior leaders in spring 2017. More common among Southeast Asian and

  other Asia-Pacific states was a wait-and-see approach, as the Trump govern-

  ment slowly filled the ranks with appointees who could formulate US foreign

  and security policies relevant to the region.

  As they waited, those seeking a coherent and well-integrated US strategy

  toward Southeast Asia and the Asia-Pacific seemed likely to be disappointed.

  Barring an unanticipated crisis, the preoccupation of the Trump administra-

  tion with other priorities was likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

  Perhaps lower-ranking officials, once in office, would be able to craft a

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  strategy worthy of the name. But they would have to convince their superiors

  of the importance of accepting and carrying out this strategy amid a din of

  other problems at home and abroad.

  As noted in chapter 7, on key issues in Southeast Asia and the broader

  Asia-Pacific, there has appeared to be general agreement within the Trump

  government—shared by congressional leaders—on the need to strengthen the

  American security position in Southeast Asia along with the rest of the Asia-

  Pacific. President Trump’s proposed increase in defense spending was pre-

  sumably in support of congressional legislation of the period, such as the

  Asia-Pacific Stability Initiative and the Asian Reassurance Initiative Act.

  How far the initiatives will go in actually expanding US presence in the

  region will depend on administration and congressional willingness to mod-

  ify or end the ongoing sequestration that has placed limits on defense and

  other discretionary government spending.

  Though many Republicans are willing to consider deficit financing in

  order to increase defense spending, Republican “budget hawks,” who report-

  edly include the current director of the Trump government’s Office of Man-

  agement and Budget along with many in Congress, oppose it. Increases in

  defense spending may therefore be contingent on cuts elsewhere.

  Congressional Republicans include strong advocates of human rights, de-

  mocracy, and American values in the conduct of US foreign policy. Howev-

  er, the early Trump government has largely followed a pattern of pragmatic

  treatment of these issues. Consistency in this stance will presumably be

  welcomed by more authoritarian Southeast Asian and Asian-Pacific leaders,

  as well as leaders in more pluralistic states like the Philippines, Myanmar,

  and Malaysia who were targeted for criticism by the Obama government and

  continue to be attacked by congressional and US nongovernment advocates.

  Achieving a unified and sustained position on US economic and trade

  issues—with Southeast Asia, the broader Asia-Pacific, or elsewhere—prom-

  ises to be more difficult than garnering consistency on security and foreign

  policy values. As explained in chapters 7 and 9, key appointees have records

  very much at odds with one another. Some strongly identified with the presi-

  dent’s campaign rhetoric pledging to deal harshly with states that “treat the

  United States unfairly” and “take jobs” from American workers. Others stick

  to conservative Republican orthodoxy in supporting free trade. Reports of

  political alliances in the White House have been widespread, often with

  President Trump’s adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and Economic

  Council Director Gary Cohn on one side and Commerce Secretary Wilbur

  Ross and US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer on the other.

  Policy is said to move back and forth between these two camps, though

  the circumstances behind this dynamic remain unclear. The president chose

  these officials and has a long record of welcoming sharply alternative views

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  among his staff. Where Trump himself will come down in this debate and

  whether he will stick with a position are very unclear.

  In sum, US policy is muddled and US attention is episodic and drifting.

  THE IMPORTANCE OF POWER SHIFT IN ASIA

  As noted in chapter 1 and explained in chapter 7, China’s recent advances

  and the mediocre performance of the Trump administration in the Asia-

  Pacific have intensified debate in the United States and China over the impli-

  cations of a possible power shift in Asia and what it means for future US-

  China relations. 5 Assertive Chinese actions challenging the United States in Asia and elsewhere have damaged US-China relations; they were widely

  seen as based on Chinese calculation of US decline following the global

  economic crisis of 2008–9. They have been influenced by US reluctance to

  bear more onerous international burdens seen under the rubric of the so-

  called Obama Doctrine and of the Trump a
dministration’s so-called America

  First foreign policy orientation. Meanwhile, there has been a widely held

  view in the US government, highlighted notably in an unclassified National

  Intelligence Estimate released in 2017, that one reason for increased chal-

  lenges for the United States posed by Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping was a

  perception of decline in the United States and Western-aligned powers. 6

  Against this background, a main determinant of greater tensions in US-

  China relations centers on China and whether it will continue assertive ad-

  vances into disputed nearby territories and other challenges to US leadership

  in the Asia-Pacific and elsewhere. Such Chinese actions could be seen even-

  tually as a direct Chinese test of US resolve as a regional security guarantor

  in the Asia-Pacific. The Chinese advances could make more likely a confron-

  tation between a more assertive China and the United States. Thus the will-

  ingness and ability of China’s leaders to curb recent assertiveness and deflect public and elite pressures for tougher foreign policy approaches represent an

  important indicator in the current period of whether US-China relations are

  likely to worsen.

  For its part, the Trump government has appeared distracted from the

  Asia-Pacific except for the crisis with North Korea. The main danger the US

  government seemed to pose for the course of US-China relations centered on

  how it might react to challenges from China deemed provocative by the US

  government. As noted earlier, the Trump government has been more likely

  than the Obama government to take a wide range of actions, possibly includ-

  ing use of force, in response to China or other foreign governments seen

  provoking the United States.

  From this perspective, the longer-term outlook for conflict or cooperation

  in Sino-American relations is influenced by the significance of China’s rising

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  influence and the perceived decline of the United States. China’s ascendance

  as a world power represents the most important change in the still-develop-

  ing international dynamics of the twenty-first century. A wide range of ex-

  pert commentaries and assessments judges that China in recent decades has

  established a clear strategy of developing wealth and power in world affairs.

  They see China’s recently assertive posture along its periphery as part of

  expanding Chinese economic, military, and political influence that entails a

  change in leadership in the Asia-Pacific region and a power shift in world

  affairs. The United States and its partners among developed countries are

  viewed in decline as China rises, and thus their choices are depicted in

  sometimes stark terms. They are advised by some to appease and accommo-

  date China, and by others to resist. 7

  Whether we have reached such a tipping point in Asian and international

  politics has important implications for the course of Sino-American relations

  and particularly for American policy toward China. Discussed below are

  indicators that can be used by readers to assess just how powerfully China

  has advanced vis-à-vis the United States in the important Asia-Pacific region

  and elsewhere in world affairs, in order to judge whether we have reached a

  point where China is willing and able to confront the United States and

  others over contested territories along its rim and other sensitive issues in the period ahead.

  There is a large literature assessing China’s rising role in world affairs.

  Common in the literature is a tendency to employ a selected set of indicators

  focused on the growing size of China’s economy; China’s leading role as an

  international manufacturer and trader, consumer of raw materials, and holder

  of foreign exchange reserves; and China’s widespread international impact

  backed by active diplomacy and steadily increasing military capabilities.

  These indicators support assessments of China’s rapid growth globally. They

  contrast with indicators of slow growth or stagnation on the part of other

  world powers, notably Japan, Europe, and the United States. As a result,

  many specialists come to the conclusion that China has risen to the point

  where a power transition is underway in China’s surroundings in Asia, with

  Beijing emerging as the region’s new leader and with the United States,

  heretofore the leading power around Asia’s rim, moving to a secondary

  position. Some specialists go further in judging that the power transition

  from the US leadership to that of China is more global in scope. 8

  Of course, there are specialists—including this writer--who employ other

  indicators and evidence to conclude that rising China probably has a long

  way to go to be in a position to challenge America’s leading role in Asian

  and world affairs. Those indicators are discussed below. They depict China

  as growing in influence but still constrained and far from dominant in the

  Asia-Pacific, and for this and other reasons unwilling and unable to effective-

  ly confront the United States, even with America’s recent problems and

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  uncertain prospects. 9 Even if America remains ineffective and preoccupied, they see China as more likely to seek incremental gains at US expense that

  do not risk crisis and confrontation with the still substantial American power.

  CHINESE LIMITATIONS AND CONSTRAINTS

  Constraints on the Chinese challenges to American leadership involve do-

  mestic preoccupations, strong Chinese interdependence with the United

  States, and China’s continued weak position relative to the United States in

  Asia and the world. 10

  Domestic Preoccupations

  There is a general consensus among specialists in China and abroad about

  some of the key domestic concerns preoccupying the Xi Jinping leadership: 11

  • Weak leadership legitimacy highly dependent on how the leaders’ perfor-

  mance is seen at any given time

  • Pervasive corruption viewed as sapping public support and undermining

  administrative efficiency

  • Widening income gaps posing challenges to the communist regime osten-

  sibly dedicated to advancing the disadvantaged

  • Incidents of social turmoil reportedly involving one hundred thousand to

  two hundred thousand mass events annually that are usually directed at

  state policies, with budget outlays for domestic security greater than Chi-

  na’s impressive national defense budget12

  • A highly resource-intensive economy (e.g., until recently, China used four

  times the amount of oil to advance its economic growth to a certain level

  than did the United States, even though the United States is inefficient and

  wasteful in how it uses oil), 13 with enormous and rapidly growing environmental damage being done in China as a result of such intensive re-

  source use

  • The need for major reform of an economic model in use in China for more

  than three decades that is widely seen to have reached a point of diminish-

  ing returns

  That China’s leadership remains uncertain and fractious in how to deal

  with these issues was underlined by the resort to state intervention (notably at odds with the announced economi
c reforms) to try to limit the damage from

  the 2015 stock market sell-off and the negative consequences for Chinese

  trade resulting from the upward valuation of the Chinese currency at that

  time. And reports of the results of the leaders’ annual retreat at the seaside

  resort Beidaihe in August 2015 said that Xi’s reform efforts were encounter-

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  ing extraordinarily “fierce resistance.” 14 How much these domestic priorities preoccupy Chinese leaders and affect their policy toward America is not

  known, but on balance they seem to incline Chinese leaders to avoid big

  problems with the United States.

  Strong Interdependence

  The second set of constraints on tough Chinese measures against the United

  States involves strong and ever-growing interdependence in US-China rela-

  tions. As discussed in chapter 6, beginning at the turn of the century, each

  government used engagement to build positive and cooperative ties and to

  build interdependence and webs of relationships that had the effect of con-

  straining the other power from taking actions that opposed its interests. As

  noted in chapter 6, the policies of engagement pursued by the United States

  and China toward one another featured respective “Gulliver strategies” that

  were designed to tie down the aggressive, assertive, and other negative policy

  tendencies of the other power through webs of interdependence in bilateral

  and multilateral relationships. 15

  The power of interdependence to constrain assertive and disruptive ac-

  tions has limits. Nevertheless, China’s uncertain domestic situation seems

  unprepared to absorb the shock of an abrupt shutdown of normal economic

  interaction that might result from a confrontation with America. And both

  sides have become increasingly aware of how their respective interests are

  tied to the well-being and success of the other, thereby limiting the tendency

  of the past to apply pressure on one another.

  China’s Insecure Position and Recent Troubles in the Asia-Pacific

  The third set of constraints on tough Chinese measures against the United

  States involves China’s insecure position in the Asia-Pacific region. The

 

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