By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Washington faces
growing criticism for pursuing open-ended competition with China without defining
what success would look like. Even as China’s coercive capabilities and
threatening behavior have rightly focused U.S. attention on the risks to
American interests, the absence of clear metrics for success leaves the door
open for partisan aspersions of the Biden administration’s approach. The
administration’s defenders, meanwhile, rebuff these attacks by pointing out
that its policies align with a broad consensus about the challenge China poses
and the steps necessary to counter it.
To be sure, both
Democratic and Republican politicians have engaged in the typical campaign ploy
of sounding tough on China. During their recent debate, U.S. Vice President
Kamala Harris accused former President Donald Trump of selling out American
interests and praising Chinese leader Xi Jinping, and Trump erroneously claimed
that “China was paying us hundreds of billions of dollars” under his
administration’s tariffs (which the Biden administration has expanded).
Meanwhile, the drumbeat of hyperbolic rhetoric and congressional hearings on
the threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has blurred the line
between legitimate commercial, scientific, and educational pursuits involving
Chinese entities and those that pose unacceptable security risks or invite
other vulnerabilities. Fearing that what might have been welcome yesterday
could be deemed disloyal today, companies, researchers, and students have
pulled back from many of the activities that have underpinned U.S. economic and
scientific leadership.
Yet beneath this
charged atmosphere, ample space for debate and discernment remains. The
apparent hardening of a U.S. consensus on China is shallower and wobblier than
it appears. In this fluid environment, there is an opportunity for the next
presidential administration to develop a more affirmative, less reactive
approach, one that dials down the heat and focuses on reducing the risks while
preserving the benefits of the vast web of ties that connect the United States
and China.
Looking at images of Chinese President Xi Jinping in
Beijing, November 2021
U.S. policymakers
should seek a more durable basis for coexistence, striking a careful balance to
ensure that efforts to address the real threats from China do not undermine the
very values and interests they aim to protect. Deterrence, particularly in the
Taiwan Strait, can be achieved only with the backing of strong diplomacy that
combines credible threats and credible assurances. And both deterrence and
prosperity require some degree of economic integration and technological
interdependence. If policymakers overplay competition with Beijing, they risk
more than raising the likelihood of war and jeopardizing efforts to address the
many transnational challenges that threaten both the United States and China.
They also risk setting the United States on a path to what could become a
pyrrhic victory, in which the country undermines its own long-term interests
and values in the name of thwarting its rival.
Reflexive Hostility
Prominent Republicans have
accused the Biden administration of weakening the United States’ position by
prioritizing diplomatic engagement over more confrontational measures designed
to undermine the Chinese government. They portray China as an existential
threat and at the same time claim that an expanded U.S. military presence and
more confrontational measures would somehow lead Beijing to capitulate to
American power. But this is even less likely to succeed than the current
approach. The Trump administration adopted a hostile posture in its last
months, calling publicly for the Chinese people to choose a different form of
government, running covert operations to undermine the Chinese Communist Party,
and discarding norms of unofficial interaction between Taipei and Washington,
which raised tensions across the Taiwan Strait to a point where the Chinese
government began to prepare for a surprise attack by the U.S. military.
Resuming a similarly confrontational policy today would only raise the specter
of a shooting war with China and aggravate the very allies the United States
would want by its side in a fight.
The Biden
administration, by contrast, has rightly invoked a sense of shared purpose,
underlining the urgency of defending an international order in which might does
not make right and working with governments of different persuasions to tackle
problems that respect no borders or walls.
But in the broader
U.S. public and policy conversation, the impulse to thwart China often
overwhelms efforts to work toward common objectives and advance U.S. interests.
Rhetoric about winning the twenty-first century reinforces the idea that
competition is zero-sum, accelerating a rush on both sides of the Pacific to
prepare for conflict and making it all too easy for critics in both societies
to deride ordinary forms of diplomatic, commercial, and scientific interaction
as naive at best and appeasement at worst.
This emphasis on
preparing for worst-case scenarios prevails in both countries. Beijing’s and
Washington’s steps to reduce their exposure to coercion and subversion dominate
the public and policy conversation, shrinking the space for efforts to consider
bounds on competition that could underpin a more stable and productive
coexistence. Any coexistence would be uneasy, built not primarily on trust but
on credible threats and assurances—deterrence paired with steps toward a modus
vivendi that both countries and peoples could live with and prosper within.
Unfortunately, the
current mix of policies in Beijing and in Washington is leading in the opposite
direction. Despite renewed diplomacy, and even though disciplined U.S.
officials may refrain from using the term “adversary” or “enemy” to describe
China, the characterization of Beijing as a competitor that Washington needs to
beat bleeds into almost every domain of the bilateral relationship. U.S.
officials, researchers, and businesses have legitimate reasons to interact with
their Chinese counterparts, at the very least to gain insight into what Chinese
scientists and other innovators are working on. Yet even mutually beneficial
exchanges become hard to justify when the United States has defined China as
the principal challenge to its national interests (and China has done the same
with the United States). And pragmatic assessments of the cost of sweeping
tariffs to U.S. pocketbooks or how restrictions on doing business with Chinese
biotech companies could limit access to lifesaving drugs have not stopped such
proposals from gaining momentum.
In China, the
situation is worse. Xi has spoken of stabilizing the relationship and promoting
people-to-people ties, but rhetoric about “winning the future” and leapfrogging
the United States to dominate frontier technologies has hardened perceptions of
Beijing’s intentions and undermines its assurances that China does not seek to
replace or displace the United States. China’s actions have compounded these
fears. To prepare for a potential conflict with the United States, China has
accelerated efforts to reduce its own reliance on key technological imports,
embed vulnerabilities in critical U.S. infrastructure, expand its nuclear
arsenal, and bolster ties with Russia—all of which deepen the spiral of enmity
and suspicion. Meanwhile, Beijing’s exit bans (which have prevented the family
members of individuals involved in legal disputes from leaving the country),
cumbersome strictures on international exchanges and visits, and restrictions
on foreign journalists and media organizations have hindered ordinary interactions
between American and Chinese people.
Both countries’
zero-sum rhetoric and preparations for conflict are furthering a gradual
descent into hostility and estrangement, reinforcing fears of a worst-case
scenario and undermining the credibility of tactical assurances. Restoring
high-level contacts and summits is necessary but insufficient to halt the
slide, especially given the imminent leadership turnover in the United States.
Diplomacy can help correct the most exaggerated misperceptions, but it can do
only so much to stabilize the relationship without both sides investing more in
a principled coexistence.
The Upside Of Integration
To halt this spiral,
Beijing and Washington will need to identify the outcomes they wish to see,
avoiding measures of success that are defined by slowing down or one-upping the
other. Pursuing resilience and deterrence, not primacy or hegemony, would set
them on a more stable course. Post–Cold War U.S. unipolarity in global politics
was the exception, not the rule. Today, neither China nor the United States can
aspire to dominance across every sector and every technology.
The nature of
technological development makes it impossible to foresee precisely how new and
emerging technologies will reshape both daily life and the battlefield. It is
therefore imperative that China and the United States maintain a degree of
integration in order to detect and learn from new advances. If the
technological leaders in a given sector are Chinese, Washington should want
U.S. firms to have access to the latest innovation. Right now, Chinese
manufacturers are far in front in solar, battery, and electric vehicle
production. Licensing Chinese technology to construct an electric vehicle
factory in the United States, for example, would build domestic expertise and
help U.S. automakers transition more quickly with top-of-the-line technology.
Opposition to such moves on the unsubstantiated grounds that renewable
technology could be a Trojan horse for communist influence is both misguided
and counterproductive to U.S. interests.
Diversification is
healthy, but the United States needs to establish limits on decoupling and
de-risking. Rewiring international supply chains comes with inflationary costs.
Washington also derives strategic benefits from economic integration. China’s
entanglement in the global economy and its dependence on international
technology, investment, and markets are important deterrents to aggression, as
they make clear what Beijing has to lose from military conflict. And U.S.
efforts to restrict the access of Chinese companies to advanced technology can
backfire. Such measures can hinder the ability of firms in developed
democracies to innovate and remain competitive, as well as incentivize firms in
China to rely more heavily on the Chinese government and domestic suppliers
than they would otherwise—a combination that could create the very juggernaut
that the initial restrictions were designed to stymie.
Balancing the risks
and benefits of economic and technological integration is a hugely complex
task, one that is already underway as the Biden administration evaluates and
updates the parameters of its “small yard, high fence.” Export controls and
other restrictions can protect strategic sectors, but they can also slow
technological progress. The process of calibrating these tools therefore
requires a rigorous assessment of tradeoffs. By bringing in more perspectives
from industry and the research community, the U.S. government can better
forecast the long-term effect of restrictive measures on American innovation
and economic vitality.
Striking A Balance
Structural forces are
at play in the power dynamic between China and the United States, but the
future is still unwritten. To a large degree, it rests on choices made in
Beijing and Washington. Arresting the slide toward conflict may seem impossible
under the current Chinese leadership, but Beijing’s preoccupation with economic
and political stability gives it a reason to explore ways to ease tensions. At
the same time, nothing about adjusting Washington’s approach assumes that
Beijing’s intentions are somehow benign or nonthreatening. The Chinese
Communist Party’s stated interests and values are clearly in conflict with a
lot—although not all—of what the United States seeks at home and in the world.
Still, U.S. analysts and policymakers should not reflexively assume that China’s
objectives are maximalist and unchanging without rigorous examination and
debate.
Some objectives, such
as Beijing’s ambition to absorb or “reunify” with Taiwan, may be immutable. But
the time and manner—peaceful or otherwise—of action in service of that goal are
not fixed. There is no credible evidence that Xi has set a deadline to resolve
the situation once and for all. Although some hawkish voices in China appear
eager to anticipate a use of force, most experts agree that Xi still sees a
military conflict over Taiwan as a crisis to be avoided rather than an
opportunity to be exploited.
This is not an
argument for reflexive accommodation. On the contrary, to get to a modus
vivendi the United States will need to improve deterrence, which will involve
more than just issuing threats and bolstering military capabilities. The United
States can and should make clear that its threats are conditional on China’s
behavior, not efforts to shift the status quo in the Taiwan Strait. Such
assurances are not the same as concessions. Assurances would sharpen Beijing’s
choices by conveying Washington’s intent to inflict harm only if China chooses
escalation over restraint; unilateral concessions, such as Trump’s suggestion
that the United States has little role to play in the Taiwan Strait, would risk
inviting Chinese adventurism.
Many in Washington
have concluded that rather than trying to slow China down, the United States
should run faster. Simply thwarting China will do nothing to spur the long-term
innovation the United States needs to ensure its future security and prosperity.
To retain the country’s position as a hub for global talent and innovation,
U.S. policymakers should encourage international students and
researchers—including those from China—to come, stay, and contribute to
scientific progress in the United States. Efforts to prevent research conducted
in the United States from being used to undermine U.S. economic and national
security must be carefully tailored to avoid smothering the very asset they aim
to safeguard. Guidelines released by the Biden administration’s Office of
Science and Technology Policy in July, for example, cite the need to balance
research security with “preserving the openness that has long enabled U.S.
R&D leadership throughout the world and without exacerbating xenophobia,
prejudice, or discrimination."
Getting China Right
The transition to a
new presidential administration provides an opportunity for a necessary
recalibration that moves U.S.-Chinese relations toward a more stable and
productive footing. U.S. partners and allies would welcome the shift, as most
of them seek constructive relationships with China and do not want to take
sides in a contest between Washington and Beijing. Domestically, a bipartisan
majority of Americans surveyed in 2023 by the nonprofit organizations National
Security Action and Foreign Policy for America said that avoiding war and
reducing tensions with China was a very important goal—more important than
preparing for a potential conflict. These polls suggest that there is political
space to debate and refine policies on China. Expected political costs of
appearing soft on China have often not materialized; Trump’s praise of Xi’s
governing style and commitment to “saving TikTok” (which is owned by a Chinese
company) from attempts by some U.S. politicians to ban it has not dampened his
public support. Meanwhile, protectionism has not delivered the anticipated
political benefits; the leader of the Teamsters, one of the United States’
largest labor unions, joined the Republican National Convention even though the
Biden administration expanded upon Trump-era tariffs on imports from China. And
the Trump campaign has taken contradictory positions on Chinese investment in
the United States, first welcoming it and then opposing it, without apparent
repercussions.
The prospect of a
political transition and the absence of solidified public attitudes in the
United States create a window for policymakers to refine their assumptions
about what is driving China’s activities, how great a threat those activities
pose to U.S. interests, and what responses are warranted. If they lean into
fear and expedience, they will fall victim to the kinds of binary thinking that
equate diplomacy with appeasement and the mere presence of Chinese-born
individuals in the United States (or Americans in China) with duplicity. That
mentality is dangerous and self-defeating. Diplomacy is not appeasement; it is
an indispensable tool for communicating the threats and assurances that are
necessary for effective deterrence. And countering Beijing’s efforts to extend
its extraterritorial control is crucial to defending American liberties. But
people born in China or of Chinese descent should not be categorically treated
as a fifth column in the United States; the diaspora has been a hotbed for resistance,
which is precisely why the CCP is so bent on monitoring and intimidating it.
And if the United States were to go so far as to enact bans or visa
restrictions on the basis of national origin, it would compromise the very
principles of nondiscrimination and equality before the law that embody the
American ideal.
The United States
faces real challenges in addressing China’s espionage, cyberattacks, and other
illicit and nonmarket practices. But policies to combat these threats must not
undermine the strengths they are meant to protect. Right now, much of the U.S.
public and policy conversation is consumed by how to counter China and defend
American workers, infrastructure, technology, and intellectual property against
foreign threats. This focus downplays the domestic harms that measures
ostensibly aimed at strengthening U.S. national security can have on the health
and vibrancy of the United States democracy, society, and innovation ecosystem.
Getting China right is critical to the United States’ success under the next
president and for years beyond.
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