By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The United States is dealing with China
and Russia at a reasonably low price and can handle both right now. Russia and
China must try to raise the cost to the U.S. but can’t afford to raise their
own.
The war in Ukraine, now about six months old, is strategically vital
for various reasons. If Russia defeats Ukraine and takes control of the
country, its forces will be on the border of Eastern Europe. A Russian presence
on Europe’s border would transform the balance of power in the Atlantic and
would thus inevitably compel the U.S. to deploy forces in Europe’s defense.
What Russia’s intentions were at the outset of
the invasion matters little. Intentions change, and strategy must not be
optimistic. So what is at stake in the Ukrainian war is the possible
resurrection of the Cold War, with all the attendant risks. From the American
point of view, engaging Russia through Ukrainian troops in Ukraine is far less
risky than another Cold War.
The Cold War did not result in a full-scale war, only the fear of war.
Western fears of Soviet intentions outstripped Soviet capabilities. Their fear,
in turn, kept NATO together, much to the
chagrin of the leaders in Moscow. Neither of their worst fears came to pass,
and therefore the collapse of the Soviet Union had more to do with internal rot
than external threats. It is not clear that any future Cold War would play out
like the last one, but one thing is likely: Given the existence of nuclear
weapons, the front line of a new Cold War would remain static, and the status
quo on each side would remain intact so long as neither side fragmented. It
would be a costly and dangerous outcome since history need not repeat itself.
But the collapse of Ukraine would pose threats that could be contained, however
expensively and dangerously. The global pattern would remain intact.
China’s vulnerabilities, and its attempts to overcome them, are
potentially more dangerous. As with Russia, the core issue is geography. For
Russia, the problem is that the Ukrainian border is less than 300 miles from
Moscow, and Russia has survived multiple invasions only by Moscow’s distance
from invaders – a distance that the collapse of the Soviet Union closed.
Russia’s obsession with Ukraine is intended to rectify that problem. China’s
geographic problem is that it has become an exporting powerhouse, which depends
on its access to the Pacific Ocean and adjacent waters. The United States sees
free Chinese access to the Pacific as a potential threat to its strategic
depth, something fundamental to the United States since the end of World War
II. Chinese access to the Pacific is blocked by a series of island states –
Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Indonesia, indirectly supported by nearby
powers such as Australia, India, and Vietnam. Not all of them are American
allies, but all have common interests against Chinese naval expansion. China
wants to defend its strategic depth by seizing and controlling it. The United
States wants to defend its strategic depth by defending it.
The geographic dimension is compounded by an economic dimension.
China’s economy depends on exports, and the United States is its largest
customer. Beijing also needs continued U.S. investment, as its financial system
is under intense pressure.
Russia is attempting to reclaim strategic depth and knows full well the
financial consequences it would create. In other words, it put up with
financial damage in exchange for strategic security. So far, it has not gained
strategic security and has absorbed significant financial damage while meting
out some of its own to Europe.
China is searching for a strategic solution while avoiding the economic
damage that further expansion would likely invite. Its primary adversary on
both fronts would be the United States. So China is probing the U.S., trying to
understand its potential responses. The response to House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi’s visit pressed the limits of an invasion of Taiwan. What China learned
about the U.S. military is unclear, but it learned that the trigger for
American economic actions lies beyond the Chinese demonstration.
America’s goal in Ukraine, then, is to deny Russia the strategic depth
it wants to limit the Russian threat to Europe. With China, its goal is to
retain American strategic depth to prevent China from threatening the U.S. or
obtaining global reach.
The issues are similar in principle, but the stakes for the United
States are not. For Washington, the China question is much more critical than
the Russia question. A Russian victory in Ukraine would redraw unofficial
boundaries and increase risks. A Chinese success would create a more global
power that challenges the U.S. and its allies around the world.
The consequences of war are continually significant. U.S. involvement adds
economic costs to the equation. So far, Russia has absorbed the costs. China
may not be able to, considering its economy is currently vulnerable. But
nations live on economics and survive on safety. In that sense, it would appear
that Russia is less interested in negotiations than China is.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden are scheduled
to meet in mid-November at a conference in Indonesia or Thailand. If the
meeting takes place, it will be the first since their teleconference in May.
Only informal and back-channel talks are happening between the U.S. and Russia.
China needs a stable economy now more than it needs command of the seas. Russia
seems able to survive what it has been dealt with economically, but it has not
broken the back of Ukrainian forces. China is nearer to an economic crisis than
Russia and is thus unwilling to risk war with the United States. It will speak,
if not settle. Russia’s economic and military situation is murky in the long
run. The United States is dealing with China and Russia at a reasonably low
price and can handle both right now. Russia and China must try to raise the
cost to the U.S. but can’t afford to raise their own.
It is a dizzying equation but not an uncommon one. China needs to reach
an understanding with the United States. Russia does not have that need. The
U.S. is flexible.
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