America Must Prepare for the Coming Chinese Empire
June 17, 2019 TNI
The last thing American policymakers or strategists
should assume is that somehow Americans are superior to the Chinese.
BEFORE ONE can outline a grand strategy for the United
States, one has to be able to understand the world in which America operates.
That may sound simple, but a bane of Washington is the assumption of knowledge
where little actually exists. Big ideas
and schemes are worthless unless one is aware of the ground-level reality of
several continents, and is able to fit them into a pattern, based not on
America’s own historical experience, but also on the historical experience of
others. Therefore, I seek to approach grand
strategy not from the viewpoint of Washington, but of the world; and not as a political scientist or academic, but
as a journalist with more than three decades of experience as a reporter around
the globe.
After covering the Third World during the Cold War and
its aftershocks which continue to the present, I have concluded that, despite
the claims of post-colonial studies courses prevalent on university campuses,
we still inhabit (in functional terms, that is) an imperial world. Empire in
some form or another is eternal, even if European colonies of the early-modern
and modern eras are gone. Thus, the issue becomes: what are the
contours of the current imperial age that affect grand strategy for the United
States? And once those contours are delineated,
what should be America’s grand strategy in response? I will endeavor to answer both questions.
Empire,
or its great power equivalent, requires the impression of permanence: the idea,
embedded in the minds of local inhabitants, that the imperial authorities will
always be there, compelling acquiescence to their rule and influence.
Wherever I traveled in Africa, the Middle East and Asia during the Cold War,
American and Soviet influence was seen as permanent; unquestioned for all time,
however arrogant and overbearing it might have been. Whatever the facts, that
was the perception. And after the Soviet Union collapsed, American influence
continued to be seen for a time as equally permanent. Make no mistake: America, since the end of World War II, and continuing
into the second decade of the twenty-first century, was an empire in all but
name.
That
is no longer the case. European and Asian allies are now, with good reason,
questioning America’s constancy. New generations
of American leaders, to judge from university liberal arts curriculums, are no
longer being educated to take pride in their country’s past and traditions.
Free trade or some equivalent, upon which liberal maritime empires have often
rested, is being abandoned. The decline of the State Department, ongoing since
the end of the Cold War, is hollowing out a primary tool of American power. Power is not only economic and military: it
is moral. And I don’t mean humanitarian, as necessary as humanitarianism is for
the American brand. But in this case, I mean something harder: the fidelity of
our word in the minds of allies. And that predictability is gone.
Meanwhile, as one
imperium-of-sorts declines, another takes its place.
China is not the challenge we face:
rather, the challenge is the new Chinese empire.
It is an empire that stretches from the
arable cradle of the ethnic Han core westward across Muslim China and Central
Asia to Iran; and from the South China Sea, across the Indian Ocean, up the
Suez Canal, to the eastern Mediterranean and the Adriatic Sea. It is an empire based on roads, railways,
energy pipelines and container ports whose pathways by land echo those of the
Tang and Yuan dynasties of the Middle Ages, and by sea echo the Ming dynasty of
the late Middle Ages and early-modern period. Because China is in the
process of building the greatest land-based navy in
history, the heart of this
new empire will be the
Indian Ocean, which is the global energy interstate, connecting the
hydrocarbon fields of the Middle East with the middle-class conurbations of
East Asia.
This new Indian Ocean empire has to be seen to be
believed. A decade ago, I spent several years visiting these Chinese ports in
the making, at a time when few in the West were paying attention. I traveled to
Gwadar in the bleak desert of Baluchistan, technically part of
Pakistan but close to the Persian Gulf. There, I saw a state-of-the-art port complex rising sheer above a traditional
village. (The Chinese are
now contemplating a naval base in nearby Jawani, which would allow them
to overwatch the Strait of Hormuz.) In Hambantota,
in Sri Lanka, I witnessed hundreds of Chinese laborers literally moving the
coast itself further inland, as armies of dump trucks carried soil away. While
America’s bridges and railways languish, it is a great moment in history to be
a Chinese civil engineer. China has gone
from building these ports, to having others manage them, and then finally to
managing them themselves. It has all been part of a process that recalls
the early days of the British and Dutch
East India companies in the same waters.
Newspaper reports talk of some of these projects being
stalled or mired in debt. That is a traditionally capitalist way to look at it.
From a mercantile and imperialist point
of view, these projects make perfect sense. In a way, the money never
really leaves China: a Chinese state
bank lends the money for a port project in a foreign country, which then
employs Chinese state workers, which utilize a Chinese logistics company, and
so on.
Geography is still paramount.
And because the Indian Ocean is connected to the South China Sea through the
Malacca, Sunda and Lombok straits, Chinese
domination of the South China Sea is crucial to Beijing. China is not a
rogue state, and China’s naval activities in the South China Sea make perfect
sense given its geopolitical and, yes, its imperial imperatives. The South China Sea not only further
unlocks the Indian Ocean for China, but it further softens up Taiwan and grants
the Chinese navy greater access to the wider Pacific.
The South China Sea represents one geographical
frontier of the Greater Indian Ocean world; the Middle East and the Horn of Africa represent
the other. The late Zbigniew
Brzezinski once wisely said in conversation that hundreds of millions of
Muslims do not yearn for democracy as much as they yearn for dignity and
justice, things which are not necessarily synonymous with elections. The Arab Spring was not about democracy: rather, it was simply a crisis
in central authority. The fact that sterile and corrupt
authoritarian systems were being rejected did
not at all mean these societies were institutionally ready for parliamentary
systems: witness Libya, Yemen and Syria. As for Iraq, it proved that
beneath the carapace of tyranny lay not
the capacity for democracy but an anarchic void. The regimes of Morocco,
Jordan and Oman provide stability, legitimacy, and a measure of the justice and
dignity that Brzezinski spoke of, precisely
because they are traditional monarchies, with only the threadbare trappings of
democracy. Tunisia’s democracy is still fragile, and the further one
travels away from the capital into the western and southern reaches of the
country, close to the Libyan and Algerian borders, the more fragile it becomes.
This is a world tailor-made for
the Chinese, who do not deliver moral lectures about the type of government a
state should have but do provide an engine for economic development.
To wit, globalization is much about
container shipping: an economic activity that the Chinese have mastered.
The Chinese military base in Djibouti is
the security hub in a wheel of ports
extending eastward to Gwadar in
Pakistan, southward to Bagamoyo in
Tanzania, and northwestward to Piraeus
in Greece, all of which, in turn, help
anchor Chinese trade and investments throughout the Middle East, East Africa
and the eastern Mediterranean. Djibouti is a virtual dictatorship, Pakistan
is in reality an army-run state, Tanzania is increasingly authoritarian and Greece is a badly institutionalized
democracy that is increasingly opening up to China. In significant measure,
between Europe and the Far East, this is the world as it really exists in
Afro-Eurasia. The Chinese empire,
unburdened by the missionary impulse long prevalent in American foreign policy,
is well suited for it.
MORE TO the point, when it comes to China, we are dealing with a unique and very
formidable cultural organism. The
American foreign policy elite does not like to talk about culture since culture
cannot be quantified, and in this age of extreme personal sensitivity, what
cannot be quantified or substantiated by a footnote is potentially radioactive.
But without a discussion of culture and geography, there is simply no hope of
understanding foreign affairs. Indeed, culture is nothing less than the sum
total of a large group of people’s experience inhabiting the same geographical
landscape for hundreds or thousands of years.
Anyone who travels in China, or even observes it
closely, realizes something that the business community intuitively grasps
better than the policy community: the
reason there is little or no separation between the public and private domains
in China is not only because the country is a dictatorship, but because there is a greater
cohesion of values and goals among Chinese compared to those among Americans. In China, you are
inside a traditional mental value system.
In that system, all areas of national activity—commercial, cyber, military,
political, technological, educational—work fluently toward the same ends, so that computer hacking, espionage, port
building and expansion, the movement of navy and fishing fleets, and so on all
appear coordinated. And within that system, Confucianism still lends a respect for hierarchy and authority among
individual Chinese, whereas American culture is
increasingly about the dismantling of authority in favor of devotion to the
individual. Confucian
societies worship old people; Western societies worship young people. One
should never forget these lines from Solzhenitsyn:
“Idolized children despise
their parents, and when they get a bit older they bully their countrymen.
Tribes with an ancestor cult have endured for centuries. No tribe would survive
long with a youth cult.”
Chinese
are educated in national pride; increasingly the opposite of what goes on in
our own schools and universities. And Chinese are extraordinarily efficient, with
a manic attention to detail. Individuals are certainly more concrete than
the mass. But that does not mean national traits simply do not exist. I have flown around China on domestic
airlines with greater ease and comfort than I could ever imagine flying around
America at its airports. And that is to say nothing about China’s bullet
trains.
Of course, there are all sorts of political and social tensions inside China. And the unrest among
the middle classes we see today in Brazil and the rest of Latin America could
well be a forerunner to what we will see in China in the 2020s, undermining Belt and Road and the whole Chinese
imperial system altogether. China’s over-leveraged economy may well be headed
for a hard, rather than a soft, landing, with all the attendant domestic
upheaval which that entails. I have real doubts about the
sustainability of the Chinese political and economic model. But the last
thing American policymakers or strategists should assume is that somehow we are
superior to the Chinese, or worse: that somehow we have a destiny that they do
not.
WE
HAVE entered a protracted struggle with China, which hopefully will not be
violent at certain junctures. And it may become
more dangerous precisely because China could weaken internally due to economic
upheavals, causing its leaders to dial up nationalism as a default option. It will be a struggle (or war) of
integration rather than of separation. Throughout the human past, wars
have seen an army from one place and an army from another place meet somewhere
in the middle to give battle. However, in the cyber age, we are all operating
inside the same operating environment, so that computer networks can attack each
other without armies ever meeting or even blood being shed. The
Russian attempt to influence our politics is an example of war by integration, which could not have existed even two decades
ago. The information age has added to
the possibilities for warfare rather than subtracted from it. The enemy is only
a click away, rather than hundreds of miles away. And because weapons
systems require guidance from satellites, outer space is now a domain for
warfare, just as the seas became once the Portuguese and Spanish had begun the
Age of Exploration. Every age of warfare has its own
characteristics. Increasingly,
warfare has become less physical and more mental: the more obsessively driven
the culture, the better suited it will be for mid-twenty-first-century cyber
warfare. If that seems offensive to the reader, remember that the future
lies inside the silences—inside the things we are most uncomfortable talking
about.
In functional and historical terms, this will be an imperial struggle, though our elites
both inside and outside government will forbid use of the term. The Chinese
will have an advantage in this type of competition as they have a greater
tradition in empire building than we do, and they are not ashamed of it as we
have become. They openly hark back to
their former dynasties and empires to justify what they are doing; whereas our
elites can hark back less and less to our own past. Westward expansion,
rather than the heroic saga portrayed by mid-twentieth-century American
historians, is now often taught as a tale of genocide against the indigenous
population and nothing more—even though without conquering the West, we never
would have had the geopolitical and economic capacity to win World War I, World
War II and the Cold War.
Moreover,
the Chinese have
demonstrated an ability to quickly adapt, which is the key to Darwinian
evolution: the continual changes that they are making to their Belt and Road
model are an example of this.
The
Chinese also have more capable leadership than we do.
Undeniably, our post-Cold War presidents have been
dramatically inferior to our Cold War presidents in terms of thinking
strategically about foreign affairs. Bill
Clinton was not altogether serious about foreign policy, especially at the
beginning of his presidency; George W.
Bush was in significant measure a failure at it; Barack Obama too often seemed to apologize for American power; and Donald Trump is frankly unsuited for high
office in the first place. Compare them to Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Nixon, Reagan and the elder Bush. Compare, too, our post-Cold War presidents to Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Xi is disciplined, strategically minded, unashamed of projecting power,
an engineer by training, with living experience in the provinces, and perhaps,
most importantly, someone with a deep sense of the tragic, as his family was a
victim of Mao Zedong’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. This is a man of virtu, in the classical Machiavellian sense. One
could go further and say that there is not only a crisis in American leadership
but in Western leadership in general. The truly formidable, dynamic leaders,
whatever their moral values, are more likely to be found outside the United
States and Europe. Witness, in addition
to Xi, Japan’s Shinzo Abe, India’s Narendra Modi, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and
Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu. They have all grasped the art of power; they are
constantly willing to take risks, and they are in office not only out of
personal ambition but because they actually want to get certain things done.
Thus, the competition between the
United States and China will coincide with a political-cultural crisis of the
West against a resurgent East.
We
have truly entered an American-Chinese bipolar struggle.
But it is a bipolar struggle with an asterisk: the asterisk being Russia, which
can always inflict consequential damage on the United States. Yet, whereas the Russians appear to our
media as classic bad guys, the Chinese
are more opaque and business-like, so the gravity of our competition with
Beijing is still insufficiently appreciated by our media.
TRULY,
THE sense of invulnerability the United States felt at the end of the Cold War
and the onset of globalization is gone. Initially,
post-Cold War globalization meant a Westernization of the world to go along
with the adoption of Western-style management practices and America’s so-called
unipolar moment. Now that this moment has passed, and with middle classes
enlarging throughout the developing world—while
different shades of authoritarianism compete with democracy—globalization is
becoming more multicultural, with the East assuming an equal position, helped
also by demographic trends. In this competition, the United
States is wrong to promote democracy per se. Instead, it should promote civil
society whether democratic or of the enlightened authoritarian mode.
(Witness the liberalizing yet authoritarian monarchies of Morocco, Jordan and
Oman. And I could give examples beyond the Middle East.) Hybrid regimes of an
enlightened authoritarian mode have been more of a norm throughout history than
democracy has been. Moreover, it has
been my clear experience that people in Africa and the Middle East care first
about basic order and physical and economic protection before they care about
political freedoms. As the late liberal philosopher Isaiah Berlin writes: “Men who live in conditions
where there is not sufficient food, warmth, shelter, and the minimum degree of
security can scarcely be expected to concern themselves with freedom of
contract or of the press.”
Obviously there exists a hierarchy of needs, and
meaningful improvement in people’s lives as a first priority should demand
flexibility on our part—or else it will be harder to compete with the Chinese. The expansion of middle classes worldwide will
by itself lead to greater calls for democracy: for as people’s material lives
improve they will increasingly demand more political freedoms anyway. We do not need to force the process. If we
do, it will be we who are the ones being ideological; not the Chinese, who have
the civilizational confidence and serenity to accept political systems as they
already are.
Yet, even at our worst, our political system is open
and capable of change in the way that China, and that other great autocratic
power, Russia, are not. A world in which
the United States is the dominant power will be a more humane world of more
personal freedoms than a world led by China.
I concentrate on China in this essay because China constitutes a much stronger economy,
a much more institutionalized political system, and a more formidable
twenty-first-century cultural genius than Russia. Therefore, China should
be the yardstick or pacing power by
which our diplomatic, security and defense establishments measures themselves:
merely by competing with China we will make our own institutions stronger. Such
competition is all that might be left to jolt our bureaucracies out of their
ongoing decrepitude and decline. Indeed, the profusion of travel orders,
security clearance paperwork, unnecessary receipts, and so forth, even as the
hacking of our systems continues, are all ways in which we deliberately deceive
and defeat ourselves. Paperwork arises
out of the lack of trust. The more paperwork, the less trust that exists within
a bureaucracy. The Pentagon is a prime example of this. We should always
remember that there is no regulation or procedure to instill basic common
sense.
September
11, 2001 might have provided the jolt that we desperately
needed. But the younger Bush
administration misused it. And even if it had not, 9/11, as significant as
it was, was a one-time security event that cannot compete with a decades-long
competition with China.
COMPETITION WITH China can teach
us about priorities, which are the mainstays of grand strategy.
One priority should be to
effectively get out of the Middle East. Every extra day
that the United States is diverted and bogged down in the Middle East with
significant numbers of ground troops helps China in the Indo-Pacific and Europe
even, where China is working to establish powerful commercial shipping
footholds in places like Trieste on Italy’s Adriatic shore and Duisburg in
riverine Germany; to say nothing about promoting its 5G digital network. I
don’t mean to say that we should pull all our forces out of the Middle East
tomorrow. I mean that our goal should be
to reduce our military footprint as quickly as practically possible, whenever
and wherever possible.
For example, the United States has had combat troops
in Afghanistan for almost two
decades with no demonstrable result.
The future of Afghanistan will be decided by competing
ethnic alliances within that country, and Indians and Iranians squaring off
against Chinese and Pakistanis. The Indians and Iranians
will build an energy and transport corridor from Chah Bahar in southeastern Iran north through western Afghanistan
into former Soviet Central Asia. The
Chinese and Pakistanis will try to build another such corridor from Gwadar in
southwestern Pakistan north, parallel with the Afghan border, to Kashgar in
western China. In particular, Pakistan, which will always require Afghanistan as a rear base against India,
must, therefore, struggle against India in Afghanistan. India, whose own imperial past encompasses the eastern half of
Afghanistan, will do
everything possible to thwart Pakistan there. Russia, which lies just to the north of Afghanistan, will also play a role because of its
interest in smothering radical Islam. A
great game is about to ensue in Afghanistan in which the United States will
play absolutely no part, regardless of how much blood it has shed there,
because it lacks a geographical basis for it, and therefore has little or no
national interest at stake.
All
we can do is help stabilize Afghanistan so that the Chinese and others can more
safely continue to establish mining and other operations in the country.
In any case, building a strong central
government in Afghanistan may prove chimerical since none has ever existed
in Kabul. The city has traditionally functioned as a central point of
arbitration for the various warlords and tribal leaders that have exercised
effective control in southern Central Asia. Covering the war against the
Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s, I
saw vividly how the Soviets lost because the mujahidin enemy, a diverse
collection of tribal-based groups which viciously distrusted each other,
provided the Soviets with no useful point of attack. Afghanistan’s very
disorganization defeated the Soviets, just as it has been defeating us.
Iran, of course, so populous and
well-educated, and fronting not one but two hydrocarbon-rich zones
(the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea), is the demographic, economic and
cultural organizing principle of both the Middle East and Central Asia.
But what happens inside Iran will be
internally driven. Iranians have a civilizational sense of themselves equal to
that of the Indians, Chinese and Japanese. Even dramatic American
diplomatic actions, like signing a nuclear deal with it, and later abrogating
that same deal, can have only a marginal effect on Iran’s confoundedly-complex
domestic politics in a country of over eighty million people. Despite periodic
street demonstrations which will continue, the very institutionalized strength
of the Revolutionary Guard Corps and other regime organizations make Iran
perhaps the most stable big state in the Muslim Middle East.
As
for Iraq, the
inching forward of political stability there, however messy and fragile, has
had relatively little to do with what the United States has done; or has not
done. In fact, improvement in the Iraqi political situation
has, for the most part, occurred despite American actions; not because of them.
One American president destabilized Iraq
by toppling its totalitarian ruler. The next American president further
destabilized it by suddenly withdrawing American troops. Thus, from the
anarchy of Iraq after Saddam Hussein came for a time the tyranny of the Islamic
State. It was the experience of living under the Islamic State that convinced
many Sunnis that they were better off allying with Shiites than with radicals
of their own sect. It is this fact that
has given Iraq some measure of hope and stability. True, American special
operations forces helped a moderate Shiite leader defeat the Islamic State. But
this moderate Shiite leader was subsequently defeated at the polls. In short, Iraq will determine its own destiny, influenced by
Iran, the great power next door. American influence will remain marginal,
whether or not we have any troops there. I say this as someone who initially
supported the invasion of Iraq, which I have come to bitterly regret.
As
for Syria, Bashar
al-Assad has reconsolidated power in the only part of Syria that ultimately
counts: its main population centers. Israel, buttressed by massive American
military and economic aid, will be able to deal with the Iranian presence in
Syria on its own. If the
Russians want to get bogged down in Syria for the sake of their decadeslong
investment in the Assad family regime, good luck to them. And by the way, Israel, unlike the United States, has a workmanlike, albeit
problematic, relationship with Russia which it can employ as a go-between with
Iran. The United States benefits very little by diverting time
and resources to Syria.
The United States needs to end
its adventures in the Middle East begun immediately after 9/11.
Of course, the Chinese hope we never
leave the Middle East. For if we deliberately defeat ourselves by remaining
militarily engaged in the Middle East, it will only ease China’s path to global
supremacy. Indeed, China would like nothing better than a war
between the United States and Iran. China is
already Iran’s largest trading partner and is pouring tens of billions of
dollars into port, canal, and other development projects in Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula,
proving how America’s military involvements in the region have gotten it
virtually nowhere.
NO
PLACE in the Muslim Middle East can serve as a litmus test of how we are doing
vis-à-vis China the way that India and Taiwan can.
They are the pivots that will go a long way to determining the strength of the
American position in the Indo-Pacific: the first-among-equals when it
comes to global strategic geography.
India is not a formal American ally
and should not become one. India is too proud and too
geographically close to China for that to be in its interest. But India, merely
on account of its growing demographic, economic and military heft, along with
its location dominating the Indian Ocean, acts as a natural balancer to China. Therefore, we should do everything we can to enable the growth of
Indian power, without ever even mentioning a formal alliance with it.
An increasingly strong India that gets
along with China while never moving into China’s orbit—and is informally
aligned with the United States—will be a sign that China is contained.
Taiwan has
been a model ally, a stable and vibrant democracy, and one of the world’s most
prosperous, efficient economies. It is a successful poster child for the
liberal world order that the United States has built and guaranteed in Asia and
Europe since World War II. Richard Nixon
and Henry Kissinger opened relations with China, but did so without endangering
Taiwan. Therefore, if it ever became clear that the United States was both
unable and unwilling to defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese military attack
on the island—or that an authoritarian China had consolidated its grip on
Taiwan without the need of such an attack—then it would signal the end of
American strategic dominance in East Asia. Countries from Japan in the north to Australia in the south would have
no choice but to seek compromising security assurances from China in the event
of such an eclipse of American power. This would be an insidious process
often outside the strictures of the news headlines, but one day we would all wake up and realize that Asia has been partly Finlandized
and the world had changed. Chinese
domination of Taiwan would also, by the way, virtually confirm China’s
effective domination of the South China Sea, which, together, with its port
building activities to the east and west of India, would help give the Chinese navy unimpeded access
to two oceans.
Grand strategy is about
recognizing what is important and what is not important. I am arguing that, given our goals, India
and Taiwan are ultimately more significant than places like Syria and
Afghanistan. (Regarding Russia, because it is not almost at war with China
as it was when the Nixon administration played the two communist regimes off
against each other, moving closer to Russia now achieves little, though
stabilizing our bilateral relationship is in our interest.)
WHEREAS
INDIA and Taiwan are greatly affected by American sea power, the desert
immensities of the Middle East are much less so.
This is not an accident, but indicates something crucial. In a century when we
will try to stay out of debilitating land conflicts that require large armies,
we are better off relying on our navy which can project power without dragging
us into bloody wars nearly as much. It is the U.S. Navy that will
counter Chinese power along the semi-circle of the navigable Eurasian rimland,
from the eastern Mediterranean to the Sea of Japan. And with less of
a chance of drifting into costly military conflicts, we will have a better
possibility of healing and invigorating our democracy at home. This is what grand strategy is
fundamentally about.
Grand strategy is not about what
we should do abroad. It is about what we should do abroad consistent
with our economic and social condition at home.
Now, keep in mind my own, three-year rule. No matter how necessary and inspiring a
military conflict, the American public will only give policymakers three years
to settle it. America’s involvement in World War I lasted little more than
eighteen months. In World War II, United States troops did not arrive in the
Eastern Hemisphere until 1942, and by the Battle of Okinawa in 1945 there was
public clamoring to end the Pacific war (as the war in Europe had already
ended). The Korean War began in 1950 and by 1952 was unpopular, with Eisenhower
forced to end it in 1953. American troops landed in large numbers in Vietnam in
1965 and the public turned against that war in 1968. The Iraq War was launched
in 2003 and the public turned against it in 2006. We should aim never to test this three-year rule again. (In
Afghanistan, we were able to break the rule only because we brought casualties
down dramatically.) That means keeping a prolonged rivalry with China
nonviolent in terms of blood-cost. We should engage on a number of
fronts: cyber, economic, naval, diplomatic and so on, without open warfare.
This can be achieved by not making a
fetish out of the South China Sea. The U.S.-China relationship is too
wide-ranging and organic to be reduced to a military dispute about one region.
Military, trade and other areas of contention should not be kept in silos,
since they can indeed interact.
To repeat, grand strategy for the
United States in the twenty-first century is, in the end, about restraining
from violence in order to concentrate on the home front, and yet compete with
China at the same time: which, in turn, means recognizing certain geographical
imperatives. (Of course, there is also the realm of ideas: so that
it is tragic that President Trump abrogated the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which
as a free-trading alliance would have given us a big idea to compete with Belt
and Road.)
For
some states and empires, which are victims of geography rather than blessed by
it—Byzantium, Habsburg
Austria—grand
strategy is a necessity for survival. Contrarily,
America’s geographical blessings have meant it can incur one disaster after
another without paying a commensurate price. But as technology shrinks distance, enmeshing our continental
half-island deeper into an unstable world, the United States finally becomes
truly vulnerable: meaning it can no longer afford heroic delusions.
Consider:
during the Cold War we didn’t need to worry about grand strategy because we
already had one. It was
called containment. George Kennan
eschewed the hot-headed approach of those in the late-1940s and early-1950s who believed that it was
possible to defeat the Soviet Union by subversion, special operations forces
and other such desperate measures. Kennan understood that since Soviet Communism was fundamentally flawed
as a system of governance, it would eventually falter and all we had to do was
outlast it (just as we are likely to outlast Communist China if only we are
patient). Thus, blessed by geography for so long, and blessed by a wise and
temperate grand strategy for over four decades, we lost the art of
thinking critically about ourselves, which, once again, is also what grand
strategy is ultimately about.
Unable
to look ourselves in the mirror and see our flaws and limitations, we
concentrated too much on our military, and invaded or intervened in one Muslim country after another
in the 2000s and achieved nothing as a result. Intervening in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s
was successful in stopping a war, but the creation of ethnic cantons that followed did not lay a
groundwork for the future, and even if it had done so, that would not have
risen to the level of grand strategy given Yugoslavia’s secondary importance.
So we are starting from scratch.
Starting
from scratch means realizing that however inspiring the dreams of our elite
are, those dreams will be stillborn if not grounded in both granular, local
realities around the world and widespread public support at home that spans
party lines—and that must be sustained over the long-term. We must be respectful of local realities, whether in Wyoming or
Afghanistan.
Robert D. Kaplan is a managing
director for global macro at Eurasia Group. His most recent book is The Return of Marco Polo’s World:
War, Strategy, and American Interests in the Twenty-first Century.
Image:
Reuters
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