Main Elements of US Foreign Policy Towards
Asia
By B. Raman
(Salient points of a presentation that I
will be making at a seminar on Re-evaluating
US Foreign Policy Towards Asia being jointly
organised at the University of Madras on
January 9, 2012, by the Chennai Centre For
China Studies, the Centre For Asia Studies,
Chennai, and the Department of Politics and
Public Administration of the University of
Madras)
As President Obama nears the end of his
first term and gets ready to seek a second
term, he has sought to give a new focus to
the US foreign policy towards Asia.
2. This new focus is marked by two
characteristics. Firstly, an open and
uninhibited expression of US concerns over
China’s ever-increasing economic and
military capabilities and its far from
transparent intentions. Secondly, an open
expression of the US determination to
maintain and strengthen its capabilities in
the Asia-Pacific region in order to
safeguard the strategic interests of not
only the US, but also other like-minded
countries which share the US concerns over
China’s capabilities and intentions.
Prominent among such like-minded countries
are Japan, South Korea, Australia, the
Philippines, Vietnam and India.
3. While the first three years of Obama’s
first term were marked by preoccupation with
the threats emanating to the security of the
US Homeland from the Af-Pak region and from
the global terrorists operating from that
region, the coming years of the Obama
Presidency will be marked by a new
preoccupation with likely threats to the US
economic, commercial and other strategic
interests from the increasing capabilities
and intentions of China and to the critical
infrastructure ---civilian as well as
military-- in the US Homeland from the
well-concealed Chinese cyber war
capabilities.
4. The US does not anticipate a conventional
war with China, but it does fear a major
threat from China to its naval primacy in
the Pacific and the Indian Ocean regions and
to its commercial interests in the region
marked by the passage of nearly US $ 1.2
trillion of its foreign trade every year
through the South China Sea. The US also
fears a major threat to its critical
infrastructure in the US Homeland as well as
overseas from the Chinese cyber war
capabilities.
5. The US nervousness is increased by the
fact that while considerable information is
available on China’s modernisation and
expansion of its conventional, nuclear and
space-related capabilities, very little
information is available on China’s cyber
war capabilities. Till recently, fears over
likely threats to US nationals and interests
from the attempts of Al Qaeda-led global
terrorists to acquire weapons of mass
destruction capabilities remained an
important driving force of the US strategic
doctrine. Since the beginning of last year,
there are indications that fears over likely
threats to the US critical infrastructure,
in times of peace and war, from China’s
cyber war capabilities have become an
important driving force of the US strategic
doctrine relating to the Asia-Pacific
region.
6. Since May last year, there have been
reliable reports in sections of the US media
about the examination of the outlines of a
cyber war doctrine to meet the new needs of
the expanding threat scenario. A significant
element of the cyber war doctrine reportedly
under contemplation is making explicit the
US determination to use its military forces
in response to a cyber attack if the gravity
of the attack crosses a certain threshold.
These reports of a cyber war doctrine under
evolution and the recent decisions of the
Obama Administration to maintain and
strengthen its military capabilities in the
Asia-Pacific region are meant to convey a
carefully-disguised cautionary to China to
behave itself not only in the high seas, but
also in the cyber space. The US is
determined to prevent China from acquiring
an asymmetric advantage in cyber space by
threatening China with a military response
against targets in its territory to
neutralise its cyber war capabilities should
it become necessary.
7. The Pentagon’s strategic defence guidance
document titled "Sustaining US Global
Leadership: Priorities for 21st Century
Defense" released at a press conference
attended by Obama on January 5,2012, says as
follows: “Over the long term, China's
emergence as a regional power will have the
potential to affect the U.S. economy and
our security in a variety of ways. Our two
countries have a strong stake in peace and
stability in East Asia and an interest in
building a cooperative bilateral
relationship. However, the growth of China's
military power must be accompanied by
greater clarity of its strategic intentions
in order to avoid causing friction in the
region. The United States will continue to
make the necessary investments to ensure
that we maintain regional access and the
ability to operate freely in keeping with
our treaty obligations and with
international law. Working closely with our
network of allies and partners, we will
continue to promote a rules-based
international order that ensures underlying
stability and encourages the peaceful rise
of new powers, economic dynamism, and
constructive defense cooperation.”
8. The focus in the Pentagon document
released to the media is on China’s
non-cyber capabilities, but there are
reports that the US is equally
concerned---if not more---over China’s cyber
warfare capabilities and intentions.
9. The US is still keen on strengthening a
co-operative convergence with China to
restore the health of the global economy, to
deal with problems relating to climate and
environment and to de-nuclearise Iran and
North Korea. Nuclear non- proliferation will
continue to be an important US foreign
policy objective. For this, it needs the
co-operation of China. At the same time,
there are growing concerns in Washington DC
that the USA’s benign strategic intentions
and objectives might not be matched by
equally benign Chinese intentions and
objectives. It would, therefore, be
necessary to reinforce the US presence and
capabilities in the Asia-Pacific region.
10. This objective is sought to be achieved
by a unilateral revamp of the US presence
and capabilities and through co-operation
with other like-minded and equally concerned
countries without giving an impression of an
attempt to promote a new alliance to contain
China. What the new Pentagon document talks
of is not a new alliance, but a network of
US allies and partners. Though not
explicitly stated, the US obviously views
Japan, South Korea and Australia as allies
in this network and India, Vietnam, the
Philippines and possibly other ASEAN
countries as partners. These unilateral and
multilateral efforts will be projected in
the months to come not as an attempt to
contain China, but as an exercise to bring
China into the mainstream of Asian peace and
security.
11. The US is interested in India playing an
activist role in this new exercise for a
network of allies and partners, but does
India reciprocate this interest? The answer
to this is not clear. India has already been
playing an activist role in relation to its
strategic co-operation with Myanmar,
Vietnam, Japan and South Korea. It has also
been increasing its strategic co-operation
with Singapore and Australia. Its relations
with the US have improved in the fields of
counter-terrorism and maritime security. But
India is still inclined to view these
relationships as without any linkages or
networking which could trigger off alarm in
Beijing.
12. India and the other Asian countries with
which India has established a one-to-one
strategic partnership share the openly
expressed US concerns over China’s
capabilities, intentions and objectives, but
they are not prepared to say so openly. They
would want to promote a policy of mutual
consultations and assistance in security
matters, but not in a manner that could
alarm China.
13. India has its own unique concerns
relating to China arising from the failure
of the India-China border talks to make any
progress and the growing strategic
co-operation between China and Pakistan. It
has to evolve its own strategy for dealing
with China in a manner that would not make
these two issues more complex and
complicated than they are now. What would be
in India’s interest is not a networked
relationship, but a mutually assisted and
reinforced relationship on a one-to-one
basis with a gradually expanding basket of
issues that could promote a strategic
convergence.
14. Two such issues in the Indo-US strategic
basket relate to counter-terrorism and
maritime security. The time has come to add
cyber security not only against non-State
actors, but also against common States of
concern to this basket. China’s undetermined
cyber warfare capabilities could pose as
much of a threat to India as they do to the
US. The time has also come for the US and
Indian Navies to think of a graduated surge
in their navy-to-navy co-operation by way of
training, joint exercises, exchanges of
visits, intelligence liaison etc.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate
of the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com Twitter :
@SORBONNE75)