By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
The Quad And AUKUS, And The Collective
Security Arrangement Limit China's Choices
For four years, as an
increasingly belligerent China breathing down their
necks, the United States' allies in Asia quietly endured a torrent of abuse
from President Donald Trump. Under President Joe Biden, they again have a
winning hand in Washington. By the time he took office, Biden, a leading
optimist about cooperation with China when he was vice president, had
transformed into a hardened skeptic. He has promoted key alliance builders to
the top Asia posts at the National Security Council, the State Department, and
the Pentagon and ensured that his first in-person summit was with Yoshihide
Suga, then Japan's prime minister. His administration has elevated the Quad (Quadrilateral Security
Dialogue), the group linking the United States with Australia, India, and
Japan, to a regular summit and agreed to help Australia build nuclear-powered
submarines under the AUKUS pact with that
country and the United Kingdom. The White House's Indo-Pacific strategy, issued
in February 2022, mentioned allies or alliances more than 30 times in a 19-page
document. China merited only
two references.
Despite this welcome
attention, the United States still fundamentally gets the relationship with its
Asian allies backward. These countries are not reluctant partners that need to
be shaken out of their complacency; they live with the threat of China every
day, are eager to blunt it, and originated many of the Biden administration's
initiatives to counter the country's influence. Nor are they reckless novices
that fail to understand the dangers of competition with China; they often
have a far more subtle understanding of coexistence than the one that prevails
in Washington. As it refines its China
strategy, the United States should increasingly take its cues from
Australia, Japan, and South Korea.
Indeed, as the United
States becomes more dependent on allies to maintain a favorable balance of
power in the Indo-Pacific, those countries will naturally expect a larger voice
in formulating a strategy on China. But the United States needs to be more in
sync with its allies on two of the biggest strategic questions: the role that
regional free-trade agreements should play in competition with China and the
ultimate goal of allied policy toward China. And there are dangerous
deficiencies in technology sharing and command and control that must be
addressed. These misalignments are not merely harmless differences between
friends. The longer they last, the more China can take advantage of them.
Early Warning
As U.S. policymakers
revamp their country's China policy, a good place to start would be to
recognize that it was not the United States that moved first to respond to the
China challenge but its allies. A decade ago, the Obama administration was
flirting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping's proposal for a "new model of
great-power relations," which, in Beijing's version, would have relegated
Japan and South Korea to second-tier status in a new bipolar U.S.-Chinese
condominium. Tokyo and other capitals quietly protested as they had in 2009
when President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao signed a joint
statement promising to respect U.S.-Chinese "core interests" and when
Obama administration officials proposed "strategic reassurance" to
Beijing. It was not that U.S. allies sought confrontation, but they had
legitimate concerns about losing U.S. support at a time of growing Chinese
coercion in their region.
U.S. officials
shifted their stance near the end of the Obama administration when the
revisionist dimensions of China's strategy became more apparent. The mood of
the broader public was changing, too. In 2012, a Chicago Council on Global
Affairs survey found that 40 percent of Americans prioritized building good
relations with China over U.S. allies; by 2018, that number had fallen to 26
percent. The sentiment was mirrored on the other side of the Pacific, with
polls in Australia, Japan, and South Korea showing overwhelming support for
each country's alliances with the United States.
In waking up to the threat of China, Washington
was far behind its most important allies in Asia, especially Japan. In 2013, as
Washington anticipated a closer partnership with Xi, Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe's government released a strategy for longer-term competition based
on assumptions about Chinese behavior that are now widely accepted in U.S. policy
circles. Abe's controversial views on Japan's history—he had argued that Japan
was often unfairly criticized for its conduct during World War II—made him look
to many in Washington like an unwelcome spoiler in U.S.-Chinese relations.
Beijing sought to exploit those doubts by targeting him with a global media
campaign. (In one of the more histrionic episodes of Beijing's relentless
campaign, the Chinese ambassador in London went so far as to write an article
for The Telegraph comparing Abe to the evil Lord Voldemort from the Harry
Potter books.) But Abe persisted with his strategy. He had been returned to
power by a ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) looking to reset relations
with Beijing after years of embarrassing Chinese incursions around the Japanese-administered
Senkaku Islands (known in China as the Diaoyu Islands). Abe understood fully
what Washington was only beginning to realize: that China's leaders judged the
United States and Japan as in precipitous decline. He intended to change that
perception.
Biden and Abe in Tokyo, December 2013
Faced with a deteriorating balance of power in China, a nation
such as Japan has three basic choices. The first is to get on the bandwagon of
the rising power. But that was never an option that Abe or any other Japanese
leader would consider. As he told an American audience in 2013, "Japan is
not now and will never be a tier-two power." The second option is internal
balancing: enhancing one's power to meet the threat. In Japan's case, the
fastest way to accomplish that would have been to acquire nuclear weapons,
which the country could develop in less than two years, but the Japanese public
remains overwhelmingly opposed, as do its allies. Instead, Abe invested in more
targeted defense capabilities and new sources of economic growth. He proposed
the acquisition of long-range missiles that would go beyond the strictly
defensive mission of Japan's Self-Defense Forces, ended a two-decade decline in
defense budgets, and centralized national security decision-making in the prime
minister's office. On the economy, Abe did not undertake the full-throated
reforms that most experts have called for, but he did spur growth by
deregulating a handful of sectors and pushing for more women in the workforce.
It was the third way to
redress a power imbalance that formed the centerpiece of Abe's overall
strategy: external balancing or strengthening one's alliances. A decade ago,
Washington may have debated the relative importance of cooperating with allies
versus cooperating with China, but for Tokyo, there was no question about which
was more important. For most of Japan's postwar history, governments had
interpreted the country's pacifist constitution as forbidding Japan from coming
to the aid of friendly nations under attack. Because the Japanese public feared
getting trapped in the United States Cold War adventures more than it feared
being abandoned, this interpretation provided a convenient alibi for settling
conflicts from the Vietnam War through the Gulf War. But Abe was now more
worried about abandonment than entrapment. The growing chorus of dovish voices
in Washington and China's expanded military footprint around Japan led him to
throw out the alibi.
In 2014, Abe
introduced legislation recognizing that Japan would
exercise the right of collective self-defense and could fight alongside the
United States if the need arose. Although Abe was partly motivated by ideological
opposition to Japan's constitutional constraints, he fundamentally sought to
ensure that the United States could depend more on Japan in a crisis so that
Japan could still rely on the United States. After a grueling 100-plus hours of
debate in Japan's Parliament, the country backed him. Abe's motivation was not
a nostalgic attachment to U.S. leadership but a realistic assessment of what it
would take to shore up U.S. power and commitments in the region for Japan's
security. That was why he, more than any other world leader, was willing to
absorb Trump's barbs and ensure that he kept the mercurial U.S. president on
his side.
Abe's external
balancing strategy reinforced countries' resilience against undue Chinese
influence and coercion. His "free and open Indo-Pacific" strategy
matched China's Belt and Road funding and promised
high-quality infrastructure investments to protect the environment and spare
the recipients dangerous debt traps. This focus on helping the region paid off:
today. Japan enjoys favorability ratings in South and Southeast Asia far
exceeding those of China or any other country. Abe gradually won over skeptical
partners with his proposal for reestablishing the Quad after China's incursions into the South China Sea and the contested Himalayan border with India.
Free-trade agreements to reinforce the region's open economic rules also
expanded under Abe. When he began his second stint as prime minister in 2012,
less than 20 percent of Japan's trade was covered by such agreements, but by
the time he left office in 2020, the share had reached 80 percent. When the
Trump administration withdrew from the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) in 2017, Abe stepped in with his counterparts from
Australia, Canada, and Singapore to ensure that the agreement went forward,
leaving a place at the table should the United States regain its bearings on
trade policy.
No other world leader
did more in the face of Chinese revisionism to
align the significant powers and invest in countries' durability against them,
ultimately shaping U.S. strategy. The Biden administration's free and open
Indo-Pacific strategies and their embrace of the Quad all flow from Abe's original
framework, often verbatim. Governments across Europe and Asia have begun
modeling their approach to the region on the Indo-Pacific concept rather than
Xi's fading China-centric alternative of a "community of common
destiny."
When Abe was
assassinated in July 2022, the world acknowledged his impact. Scholars and
diplomats also noted the shortcomings of his approach: challenged relations
with South Korea, fruitless diplomatic efforts with Russia, and incomplete
efforts at spurring economic growth and sustaining the economic empowerment of
women to address Japan's challenging demographic picture. But to move forward,
Washington's approach to allies must include an understanding of how
persistently and effectively Abe introduced the framework that defines
competition with China—and where U.S. strategy falls short by comparison.
The Stalwarts
Japan has
emerged as the most important net exporter of security in the Indo-Pacific.
Still, Australia and South Korea remain critical bookends, 96 given their
capable militaries and development and diplomacy toolkits. Mainly for reasons
of geography, Canberra and Seoul were not as quick to organize in response to
the China challenge as Japan—Australia because it is so far from China and
South Korea because it is so close. U.S. allies all have closer trade relations
with China than the United States does, particularly Australia and South Korea:
35 percent of Australian exports and 25 percent of South Korean exports go to
China, compared with 22 percent of Japanese exports and nine percent of U.S.
exports. But Australia and South Korea are increasingly finding ways to adopt
the same Indo-Pacific framework that Japan championed and Washington embraced.
Two decades ago,
Australia began profiting from exporting natural resources to China and
importing students and tourists. Without the kind of manufacturing base that
alerted the Japanese public early on to Chinese misbehavior in the global
market—stealing intellectual property, dumping exports at below-market prices,
and restricting foreign investment—Australians mostly saw upsides to their
economic relationship with China. The Lowy Institute, an Australian think tank,
found in 2013 that 76 percent of Australians thought their economic future lay
with China rather than the United States. This outlook mirrored the United
States' growing optimism about China. Whereas successive U.S. administrations
spurred Beijing's request for a "strategic partnership," Canberra
formed a "comprehensive strategic partnership" with Beijing in 2014.
Beijing's expansion
into the South China Sea in 2014 and 2015 alarmed Australian national security
community members just as it did their U.S. counterparts. But for most
Australians, the wake-up call came in 2018, when Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull announced that China was trying to build a submarine base in the
Pacific Islands of Vanuatu. This development would have put potentially hostile
forces in Australia's neighborhood for the first time since World War II. Then,
in 2019, an influential Australian news program exposed vivid details about the
Chinese Communist Party's extensive operations to influence Australian politics
and society, prompting Parliament to draft tough laws against foreign
interference.
When the Australian
government called for an international inquiry into the
origins of Covid-19 in 2020, the Chinese ambassador in Canberra
threatened a massive consumer boycott of Australian goods. Chinese imports of
coal, copper, barley and wine from Australia soon fell to a trickle as Beijing
tried to use economic interdependence as a tool for coercion. Australian
journalists were detained inside China, and Chinese propagandists launched a
disinformation campaign in the region with provocative charges of Australian
racism and war crimes. Beijing escalated tensions further by delivering a list
of 14 demands that Canberra had to meet before relations could improve,
including silence on Chinese human rights abuses and an end to funding for
think tanks critical of Chinese military activities. This is where China's COVID-19 Politics are quite horrible.
The Chinese gambit
failed spectacularly. This year's Lowy poll found a stunning reversal in views
of China, with 75 percent of Australians saying that China will become a military
threat to Australia in the future. Australia became the first country to ban
the Chinese companies Huawei and ZTE from its telecommunications markets. A new
foreign investment review board is limiting Chinese acquisitions of strategic
assets in Australia. The government of Australian Prime Minister Scott
Morrison, who took office in August 2018, defied China's demands by agreeing to
build nuclear-powered submarines and develop other advanced capabilities with
the United States and the United Kingdom under the AUKUS pact. Australia has
also expanded defense cooperation with Japan, signing an agreement this year
that provides reciprocal access to military facilities in the two countries and
inviting increasing numbers of Japanese forces to participate in military
exercises in Australia. The country has also signed new defense agreements with
India. Like Japan, Australia has moved faster than the United States to manage
competition with China.
South Korea is the
latest U.S. ally in Asia to join the dance. In its case, China's proximity left
it with much less flexibility than Australia and Japan. Japan has thwarted one
Chinese invasion in the thirteenth century, and Australia has faced none, but
South Korea's history is scarred by dozens of invasions from its giant neighbor
to the north. Moreover, China's influence on North Korea—the most critical
security challenge for South Korea—is only increasing as Pyongyang has come to
rely on China for 90 percent of its trade.
At times, Seoul's efforts
to manage relations with the great powers around the Korean Peninsula have only
incited greater suspicion, jealousy, and pressure. The governments of the
previous two presidents, Park Geun-Hye and Moon
Jae-in, fell into that trap. Park solicited Beijing's support despite her
pro-alliance bona fides with Washington. Her government implicitly endorsed a
U.S.-Chinese structure to Asian geopolitics by proposing a trilateral dialogue
for the United States, China, and South Korea, much to the chagrin of Tokyo. In
response to a multibillion-dollar Chinese boycott of South Korean companies to
punish Seoul for accepting U.S. Terminal High Altitude Air Defense (THAAD)
batteries in 2016, the Moon government promised Beijing that it would limit
future military cooperation on missile defense with the United States. This
unparalleled accommodation of China concerning the U.S.–South Korean alliance
invited suspicion in Washington and raised ambitions in Beijing.
However, the South Korean
public was souring on China even faster than Australia. The THAAD boycott,
sympathy with Hong Kong's citizens after Beijing's crackdown, and mounting
troubles for South Korean companies operating in China all cratered that
country's approval ratings. By 2021, 77 percent of South Koreans said they did
not trust China. When the conservative politician Yoon Suk-yeul became president in May 2022, he realigned South
Korean diplomacy with the United States and Japan despite lingering tensions
with Tokyo over painful historical issues. Yoon will still be constrained by
geography and the North Korean problem. When Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the
U.S. House of Representatives, visited Tokyo after her contentious visit to
Taiwan in August, for example, she met with Japan's prime minister. Still, when
she stopped in Seoul, Yoon was conveniently on vacation. Nevertheless, Seoul's
growing alignment with the United States is now tracking that of Australia and
Japan.
In the larger
tapestry of U.S. relationships in the Indo-Pacific, the Biden
administration is rightly focused on expanded engagement with India
through the Quad, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, longtime treaty
allies such as the Philippines and Thailand, and now, with the Pacific Island
countries. Many nations the United States is courting have dynamic populations
poised to play leading roles in the region's future and the world. Some compete
with China in a measured fashion, such as Vietnam and India. All are debating
their future trajectories, including their longer-term relationships with the
United States and China. That soul-searching makes deeper U.S. engagement all
the more critical.
At the same time,
Australia, Japan, and South Korea will be in a league of their own for the
foreseeable future. These are the alliances that the United States will need
most in any regional crisis, and the Biden administration has been right to
prioritize them. But it will have to begin thinking of allies not just as
instruments of U.S. policy but as strategic innovators who see the gaps in
Washington's approach.
Tell Them How This Ends
One subtle but
crucial difference concerns the long-term vision for relations with China.
Abe's strategy was premised on resetting relations with China, not containing
or decoupling entirely from the Chinese economy. In April 2022, when the LDP's
hawkish Research Commission on National Security prepared the ruling party's
framework for Japan's next defense plan, its members called for a doubling of
defense spending to two percent of GDP in five years and an expansion of
Japan's strike capability. Still, the document clarified that the country's
ultimate goal was a "constructive and stable relationship" with
China. Even after Beijing's economic boycott, the Morrison government in
Australia expanded funding for exchanges with China through organizations such
as the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations, and the new Labor
foreign minister, Penny Wong, has spoken of her desire for relations to be
"stabilized." Although South Korean President Yoon promised to back
Biden's Indo-Pacific strategy and be less deferential toward China, his foreign
minister, Park Jin, pledged to support regional and
global cooperation in Beijing.
One could interpret
these stances as duplicitous accommodation. Still, a more accurate reading
would be that all three significant allies seek to work with Beijing on issues
of concern from a position of strength backed by a closer alignment with the
United States and other like-minded countries in the region. Put another way,
U.S. allies in Asia still hope for some version of the strategy that U.S.
presidents from Richard Nixon to Obama pursued in the region: a combination of
balancing and engaging China, but with a longer-term aim of integrating the
country under rules favorable to the advanced industrial democracies. The idea
is to compete with China, but with a clear end state in mind.
There is broad
consensus in Canberra, Seoul, Tokyo, and Washington that Xi will present geopolitical and economic challenges
for the next decade and that U.S. allies must cooperate in blunting his worst
ambitions. But where the allies differ from Washington is the need for a
framework that does more than isolate Beijing. Although much of the United
States' post–Cold War strategy explicitly sought to shape China in the belief
that a combination of engagement and counterbalancing could bend Beijing toward
a more durable relationship for the long term, the Biden administration's
Indo-Pacific strategy abandons that mission: "Our objective is not to
change the [People's Republic of China] but to shape the strategic environment
in which it operates, building a balance of influence in the world that is
maximally favorable to the United States, our allies and partners, and the
interests and values we share," the document states.
Xi's China is
a much stricter counterpart, and competition across all domains, from military
to technology, will be intense. But the current U.S. approach has left allies
and partners wondering what the American endgame is for relations with China.
If they still need to give up on shaping China, neither should the United
States.
It's The Economic Strategy, Stupid
Asian allies'
well-known frustration with the lack of a U.S. trade strategy since
the Trump administration is rooted in this longer-term search for a
workable equilibrium with China, the top trading partner to most of the region.
The TPP appealed to the United States Indo-Pacific partners not only because it
integrated them into the attractive U.S. market but also because it set the
stage for more successful negotiations with Beijing over economic rules in the
future. The original vision for the TPP was that the weight of so many open
regional economies would propel talks on the Trans-Atlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP) with Europe and put enormous pressure on Beijing
while providing incentives to negotiate along similar lines with all the member
states. 102 In Sydney in 2007, the United States and other leaders attending
the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum agreed that the TPP would be one
building block for a broader free-trade area in the Asia-Pacific that included
China. (The U.S. delegation insisted on the term "area" rather than
"agreement" to avoid triggering congressional notification before the
table was set for taking on negotiations with Beijing.) When the momentum
behind the TPP was at its height in 2015, Obama briefed Xi on the pact, and
prominent Chinese officials pointed to it as external validation of economic
reforms, just as Premier Zhu Rongzi used the
agreement to create the World Trade Organization in the 1990s to restructure
China's state-owned enterprises.
Whether that original
vision for TPP as a counterweight to Beijing could ever have been realized is a
moot question since the Trump administration withdrew from the partnership, and
the Biden administration is adamant that it will not return. This leaves U.S.
allies, the U.S. business community, and even many Chinese businesses in a much
weaker negotiating position vis-à-vis the Chinese state. More alarming to those
depending on a U.S.-led order is the vacuum created by Washington's retreat on
trade policy. In 2022, the Lowy Institute's index of regional power upgraded
the United States to the top regional diplomatic influence. However, it noted
that its economic sway had declined since the Trump years. Xi underscored the
point in 2021 when he announced China's intention to
join the CPTPP, the successor to the TPP—an agreement Washington had once
championed.
Understanding the geopolitical
ramifications of its absent economic strategy, the Biden administration
announced the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) in May 2022 in Tokyo. The
IPEF brings the United States together with 13 other regional economies for
dialogue on digital trade, the environment, and corruption. Although the
participation of countries that have previously avoided trade pacts with the
United States, such as India and Indonesia, is a geopolitical plus, Biden
administration officials insist that the IPEF is not a trade agreement and that
there will be no market-access provisions characteristic of the TPP. India and
Indonesia agreed to participate precisely because they were not being asked to
open up their markets significantly. The IPEF addresses important modern issues
such as digital trade, and the talks could gather momentum and yield meaningful
agreements short of trade liberalization or market access. But it is a shell of
what the TTP would have been.
Recognizing that the
quarter loaf of the IPEF is better than no loaf, U.S. allies are publicly
championing the framework as evidence that the United States is back in the
economic rule-making game in Asia. Privately, however, there is still great
concern that the framework is insufficient to blunt China's growing economic
clout. The obvious way to make the IPEF more substantive would be to negotiate
a digital trade agreement based on existing provisions in the U.S. pacts with
Canada, Japan, and Mexico that the Trump administration negotiated and in
comparable deals that Australia and Singapore signed. This is not likely to
happen soon, given the protectionists in the Biden administration and Congress
who worry that the IPEF might be a gateway drug to the TPP. Still, the pressure
from allies and businesses to deliver substantive agreements will continue to
build.
Better Together
Just as close allies
need the United States to lead constructive engagement with Beijing and
meaningful economic initiatives for the region, they also require U.S. backing
to strengthen deterrence capabilities in the face of a more menacing China.
(That may sound contradictory, but allies in the region have to deal with both
realities.) U.S. allies are making big moves and taking on new risks. Japan's
recognition of the right of collective defense and its introduction of strike
capability put Tokyo directly in Beijing's crosshairs. Beijing now regularly
releases satellite images of testing ranges shaped like Japanese bases
destroyed by ballistic missile attacks. In addition to committing to AUKUS, Australia has
pledged to expand weapons production with U.S. firms through the Guided Weapons
and Explosive Ordnance Enterprise, a multibillion-dollar program. In response
to growing Chinese military challenges, Australia is developing new initiatives
to host more U.S. troops and give the U.S. military greater access to the north
and west of the country. And in South Korea, despite threats from Beijing,
Moscow, and Pyongyang, Yoon has sought to increase readiness by resuming
regular defense exercises with the United States that Trump and Moon had
paused.
These developments
have all been embraced by the Biden administration and Congress. Yet even
though U.S. allies are making major changes in their defense production and
operations, the mechanics of alliance management in Washington are still based
on antiquated designs. True, the United States has upgraded its security
cooperation with Japan by creating new military-to-military working groups.
Still, the U.S.-Japanese alliance lacks anything like the combined commands
that characterize the U.S. alliances with South Korea or NATO—alliances on the
frontline designed during the Cold War to "fight tonight,"
a readiness level still maintained by the U.S. Command in South Korea. Nor was
the U.S.-Australian alliance designed for joint warfighting in the
Indo-Pacific, despite the close operational relationship that U.S. and
Australian forces developed fighting in the Middle East. Integrated command and
control are critical for these alliances because North Korean missiles and
Chinese naval deployments have put Japan and even Australia on the frontlines
of a potential war for the first time. It also matters because Japan's
deployment of long-range strike capabilities could trigger escalation by China
or North Korea if that deployment is not well integrated into U.S. military
planning.
Australia, meanwhile,
is counting on the Pentagon and the State Department to share military
technology in ways that follow through on Biden's commitment to helping build
nuclear-powered submarines and other advanced military capabilities. In 2017,
Congress expanded the definition of "the national technology and
industrial base," a legal concept demarcating countries whose companies
are given national security priority, adding the United Kingdom and Australia.
But in parts of the Pentagon and the State Department, the rules governing
export licensing and technology transfer continue to be implemented case by
case, as if the addition of Australia and the United Kingdom had not occurred,
and "buy American" provisions in U.S. legislation continue to
obstruct efforts to transfer technologies and integrate production between
trusted allies. Without reform, AUKUS and other Australian investments in
deterrence will be difficult to realize. That would be a setback for
Australia's defense, its alliance with the United States, and the overall
balance of power in the Indo-Pacific.
Allies have big
decisions to make as well. For Japan to increase defense spending to two
percent of GDP, the government would have to cut social welfare programs or
issue much more debt than it has. And suppose it is to integrate itself into
U.S. military planning further. In that case, it will have to improve its
protection of information to the levels of Five Eyes intelligence partners such
as Australia, which can be trusted not to leak the most sensitive intelligence
and technical information. Australia's initiatives will require increased
spending or hard choices about priorities. South Korea under Yoon has pledged
to support the Biden administration's Indo-Pacific strategy in Southeast Asia.
Still, it is sticking to its excuses regarding Taiwan contingencies
closer to home, preferring to remain neutral rather than upset Beijing.
However, more proactive reform from Congress and the Biden administration would
be needed to make these choices easier for U.S. allies, putting all the
participants' security at risk.
Hub, Meet Spoke
The United
States has one advantage in the unfolding geopolitical contest with China
that Beijing cannot replicate: a network of security alliances with democracies
spanning the Pacific Ocean. Although China can claim growing influence in parts
of the global South, Beijing's closest security partnerships are limited to a
flailing Russia, an isolated Iran, and a provocative North Korea. The United
States, in contrast, has well-established treaties with the region's most
advanced economies and militaries.
In 1991, James Baker,
then the U.S. secretary of state, wrote that Asian security was
underpinned by the "hub and spokes" of America's bilateral alliances.
Today, that structure is shifting more and more toward the hubs. Australia and
Japan are establishing deeper security cooperation and building partnerships
and capacity in other countries in the region, such as Indonesia, the
Philippines, and Vietnam. Greater U.S. investment in its closest alliances will
pay dividends not only in the integration and readiness of those bilateral
relationships but also in the ability of U.S. allies to bolster cooperation and
resilience across the region.
Strengthening these
broader alliance networks will also help reset China's expectations about
American staying power and the durability of regional security networks. The
economic interdependence of all U.S. allies with China makes a NATO-style
collective security arrangement a nonstarter in Beijing's absence of major
military moves. But the Quad, AUKUS, and the burgeoning security ties among
Asian democracies serve as valuable reminders to Beijing that its coercion has
consequences and that collective security arrangement that constrain China's
choices are indeed possible.
At the same time,
some in Beijing may also find that the U.S. emphasis on allies helps stabilize
U.S.-Chinese relations. Abe's strategy for competition with China helped define
the U.S. strategy under Biden. Abe's search for a sustainable equilibrium with
China should also shape thinking in Washington. After all, there is a deep
consensus from Canberra to Tokyo: beyond the immediate task of defending
against China's coercion, the long game is achieving a productive relationship
with Beijing.
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