War With
China? It’s Already Under Way
By Michael T.
Klare
February
18, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-
In his highly acclaimed 2017 book,
Destined for War,
Harvard professor Graham Allison assessed the
likelihood that the United States and China would
one day find themselves at war. Comparing the
U.S.-Chinese relationship to great-power rivalries
all the way back to the Peloponnesian War of the
fifth century BC, he concluded that the future risk
of a conflagration was substantial. Like much
current analysis of U.S.-Chinese relations, however,
he missed a crucial point: for all intents and
purposes, the United States and China are already at
war with one another. Even if their present
slow-burn conflict may not produce the immediate
devastation of a conventional hot war, its long-term
consequences could prove no less dire.
To suggest
this means reassessing our understanding of what
constitutes war. From Allison’s perspective (and
that of so many others in Washington and elsewhere),
“peace” and “war” stand as polar opposites. One day,
our soldiers are in their garrisons being trained
and cleaning their weapons; the next, they are
called into action and sent onto a battlefield. War,
in this model, begins when the first shots are
fired.
Well,
think again in this new era of
growing great-power struggle and competition. Today,
war means so much more than military combat and can
take place even as the leaders of the warring powers
meet to negotiate and
share dry-aged
steak and whipped potatoes (as Donald Trump and Xi
Jinping did at Mar-a-Lago in 2017). That is exactly
where we are when it comes to Sino-American
relations. Consider it war by another name, or
perhaps, to bring back a long-retired term, a
burning new version of a cold war.
Even
before Donald Trump entered the Oval Office, the
U.S. military and other branches of government were
already
gearing up for a
long-term quasi-war, involving both growing economic
and diplomatic pressure on China and a buildup of
military forces along that country’s periphery.
Since his arrival, such initiatives have escalated
into Cold War-style
combat by another
name, with his administration committed to defeating
China in a struggle for global economic,
technological, and military supremacy.
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This
includes the president’s much-publicized “trade
war” with China, aimed at hobbling that
country’s future growth; a techno-war designed
to prevent it from overtaking the U.S. in key
breakthrough areas of technology; a diplomatic
war intended to isolate Beijing and frustrate
its grandiose plans for global outreach; a cyber
war (largely hidden from public scrutiny); and a
range of military measures as well. This may not
be war in the traditional sense of the term, but
for leaders on both sides, it has the feel of
one.
Why
China?
The media
and many politicians continue to focus on
U.S.-Russian relations, in large part because of
revelations of Moscow’s meddling in the 2016
American presidential election and the ongoing
Mueller investigation. Behind the scenes, however,
most senior military and foreign policy officials in
Washington view China, not Russia, as the country’s
principal adversary. In eastern Ukraine, the
Balkans, Syria, cyberspace, and in the area of
nuclear weaponry, Russia does indeed pose a variety
of threats to Washington’s goals and desires. Still,
as an economically hobbled petro-state, it lacks the
kind of might that would allow it to truly challenge
this country’s status as the world’s dominant power.
China is another story altogether. With its vast
economy, growing technological prowess,
intercontinental “Belt and Road” infrastructure
project, and rapidly modernizing military, an
emboldened China could someday match or even exceed
U.S. power on a global scale, an outcome American
elites are determined to prevent at any cost.
Washington’s fears of a rising China were on full
display in January with the release of the 2019
Worldwide Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence
Community, a
synthesis of the
views of the Central Intelligence Agency and other
members of that “community.” Its conclusion: “We
assess that China’s leaders will try to extend the
country’s global economic, political, and military
reach while using China’s military capabilities and
overseas infrastructure and energy investments under
the Belt and Road Initiative to diminish U.S.
influence.”
To
counter such efforts, every branch of government is
now expected to mobilize its capabilities to bolster
American -- and diminish Chinese -- power. In
Pentagon documents, this stance is summed up by the
term “overmatch,” which translates as
the eternal preservation of American global
superiority vis-à-vis China (and all other potential
rivals). “The United States must retain overmatch,”
the administration’s
National Security Strategy
insists, and preserve a “combination of capabilities
in sufficient scale to prevent enemy success,” while
continuing to “shape the international environment
to protect our interests.”
In other
words, there can never be parity between the two
countries. The only acceptable status for China is
as a distinctly lesser power. To ensure such an
outcome, administration officials insist, the U.S.
must take action on a daily basis to contain or
impede its rise.
In previous
epochs, as Allison makes clear in his book, this
equation -- a prevailing power seeking to retain its
dominant status and a rising power seeking to
overcome its subordinate one -- has almost always
resulted in conventional conflict. In today’s world,
however, where great-power armed combat could
possibly end in a nuclear exchange and mutual
annihilation, direct military conflict is a
distinctly unappealing option for all parties.
Instead, governing elites have developed other means
of warfare -- economic, technological, and covert --
to achieve such strategic objectives. Viewed this
way, the United States is already in close to full
combat mode with respect to China.
Trade War
When
it comes to the economy, the language betrays the
reality all too clearly. The Trump administration’s
economic struggle with China is regularly described,
openly and without qualification, as a “war.” And
there’s no doubt that senior White House officials,
beginning with the president and his chief trade
representative,
Robert Lighthizer,
see it just that way: as a means of pulverizing the
Chinese economy and so curtailing that country’s
ability to compete with the United States in all
other measures of power.
Ostensibly, the aim of President Trump’s May 2018
decision to impose $60 billion in tariffs on Chinese
imports (increased
in September to $200 billion) was to rectify a trade
imbalance between the two countries, while
protecting the American economy against what is
described as China’s malign behavior. Its trade
practices “plainly constitute a grave threat to the
long-term health and prosperity of the United States
economy,” as the president
put it when
announcing the second round of tariffs.
An
examination of the demands submitted to Chinese
negotiators by the U.S. trade delegation last May
suggests, however, that Washington’s primary intent
hasn’t been to rectify that trade imbalance but to
impede China’s economic growth. Among the
stipulations Beijing must acquiesce to before
receiving tariff relief, according to
leaked documents
from U.S. negotiators that were spread on Chinese
social media:
-
halting all government subsidies to advanced
manufacturing industries in its Made in China
2025 program, an endeavor that covers 10 key
economic sectors, including aircraft
manufacturing, electric cars, robotics, computer
microchips, and artificial intelligence;
-
accepting American restrictions on investments
in sensitive technologies without retaliating;
-
opening up its service and agricultural sectors
-- areas where Chinese firms have an inherent
advantage -- to full American competition.
In
fact, this should be considered a straightforward
declaration of economic war. Acquiescing to such
demands would mean accepting a permanent subordinate
status vis-à-vis the United States in hopes of
continuing a profitable trade relationship with this
country. “The list reads like the terms for a
surrender rather than a basis for negotiation,” was
the way Eswar
Prasad, an economics professor at Cornell
University, accurately described these developments.
Technological Warfare
As
suggested by America’s trade demands, Washington’s
intent is not only to hobble China’s economy today
and tomorrow but for decades to come. This has led
to an intense,
far-ranging campaign
to deprive it of access to advanced technologies and
to cripple its leading technology firms.
Chinese leaders have long realized that, for their
country to achieve economic and military parity with
the United States, they must master the cutting-edge
technologies that will dominate the
twenty-first-century global economy, including
artificial intelligence (AI), fifth-generation (5G)
telecommunications, electric vehicles, and
nanotechnology. Not surprisingly then, the
government has invested in a major way in science
and technology education, subsidized research in
pathbreaking fields, and helped launch promising
startups, among other such endeavors -- all in the
very fashion that the Internet and other American
computer and aerospace innovations were
originally financed
and encouraged by the Department of Defense.
Chinese companies have also demanded technology
transfers when investing in or forging industrial
partnerships with foreign firms, a common practice
in international development. India, to cite a
recent example of this phenomenon,
expects that
significant technology transfers from American firms
will be one outcome of its agreed-upon purchases of
advanced American weaponry.
In
addition, Chinese firms have been
accused of stealing
American technology through cybertheft, provoking
widespread outrage in this country. Realistically
speaking, it’s difficult for outside observers to
determine to what degree China’s recent
technological advances are the product of
commonplace and legitimate investments in science
and technology and to what degree they’re due to
cyberespionage. Given Beijing’s
massive investment
in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
education at the graduate and post-graduate level,
however, it’s safe to assume that most of that
country’s advances are the result of domestic
efforts.
Certainly, given what’s publicly known about Chinese
cybertheft activities, it’s reasonable for American
officials to apply pressure on Beijing to curb the
practice. However, the Trump administration’s drive
to blunt that country’s technological progress is
also aimed at perfectly legitimate activities. For
example, the White House seeks to ban Beijing's
government subsidies for progress on artificial
intelligence at the same time that the Department of
Defense is
pouring billions of
dollars into AI research at home. The administration
is also acting to block the Chinese acquisition of
U.S. technology firms and of
exports of advanced
components and know-how.
In an
example of this technology war that’s
made the headlines
lately, Washington has been actively seeking to
sabotage the efforts of
Huawei, one of
China’s most prominent telecom firms, to gain
leadership in the global deployment of 5G wireless
communications. Such
wireless systems
are important in part because they will transmit
colossal amounts of electronic data at far faster
rates than now conceivable, facilitating the
introduction of self-driving cars, widespread
roboticization, and the universal
application of AI.
Second only to Apple as the world’s supplier of
smartphones and a major producer of
telecommunications equipment, Huawei has sought to
take the lead in the race for 5G adaptation around
the world. Fearing that this might give China an
enormous advantage in the coming decades, the Trump
administration has tried to prevent that. In what is
widely described as a “tech
Cold War,” it has
put
enormous pressure
on both its Asian and European allies to bar the
company from conducting business in their countries,
even as it sought the arrest in Canada of Huawei’s
chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, and her
extradition to the
U.S. on charges of tricking American banks into
aiding Iranian firms (in violation of Washington’s
sanctions on that country). Other attacks on Huawei
are in the works, including a potential
ban on the sales of
its products in this country. Such moves are
regularly described as focused on boosting the
security of both the United States and its allies by
preventing the Chinese government from using
Huawei’s telecom networks to steal military secrets.
The real reason -- barely disguised -- is simply to
block China from gaining technological parity with
the United States.
Cyberwarfare
There
would be much to write on this subject, if only it
weren’t still hidden in the shadows of the growing
conflict between the two countries. Not
surprisingly, however, little information is
available on U.S.-Chinese cyberwarfare. All that can
be said with confidence is that an intense war is
now being waged between the two countries in
cyberspace. American officials
accuse China of
engaging in a broad-based cyber-assault on this
country, involving both outright cyberespionage to
obtain military as well as corporate secrets and
widespread political meddling. “What the Russians
are doing pales in comparison to what China is
doing,”
said Vice President
Mike Pence last October in a speech at the Hudson
Institute, though -- typically on the subject -- he
provided not a shred of evidence for his claim.
Not
disclosed is what this country is doing to combat
China in cyberspace. All that can be known from
available information is that this is a two-sided
war in which the U.S. is
conducting its own
assaults. “The United States will impose swift and
costly consequences on foreign governments,
criminals, and other actors who undertake
significant malicious cyber activities,” the 2017
National Security Strategy affirmed. What form these
“consequences” have taken has yet to be revealed,
but there’s little doubt that America’s cyber
warriors have been active in this domain.
Diplomatic and Military Coercion
Completing the picture of America’s ongoing war with
China are the fierce pressures being exerted on the
diplomatic and military fronts to frustrate
Beijing’s geopolitical ambitions. To advance those
aspirations, China’s leadership is
relying heavily on a much-touted
Belt and Road Initiative,
a trillion-dollar plan to help fund and encourage
the construction of a vast new network of road,
rail, port, and pipeline infrastructure across
Eurasia and into the Middle East and Africa. By
financing -- and, in many cases, actually building
-- such infrastructure, Beijing hopes to bind the
economies of a host of far-flung nations ever closer
to its own, while increasing its political influence
across the Eurasian mainland and Africa. As
Beijing’s leadership sees it, at least in terms of
orienting the planet's future economics, its role
would be similar to that of the Marshall Plan that
cemented U.S. influence in Europe after World War
II.
And
given exactly that possibility, Washington has begun
to actively seek to undermine the Belt and Road
wherever it can -- discouraging allies from
participating, while stirring up unease in countries
like Malaysia and Uganda over the
enormous debts to
China they may end up with and the
heavy-handed manner
in which that country’s firms often carry out such
overseas construction projects. (For example, they
typically bring in Chinese laborers to do most of
the work, rather than hiring and training locals.)
“China uses bribes, opaque agreements, and the
strategic use of debt to hold states in Africa
captive to Beijing’s wishes and demands,” National
Security Advisor John Bolton
claimed in a
December speech on U.S. policy on that continent.
“Its investment ventures are riddled with
corruption," he added, “and do not meet the same
environmental or ethical standards as U.S.
developmental programs.” Bolton promised that the
Trump administration would provide a superior
alternative for African nations seeking development
funds, but -- and this is something of a pattern as
well -- no such assistance has yet materialized.
In
addition to diplomatic pushback, the administration
has undertaken a series of initiatives intended to
isolate China militarily and limit its strategic
options. In South Asia, for example, Washington has
abandoned its past position of maintaining rough
parity in its relations with India and Pakistan. In
recent years, it’s
swung sharply
towards a strategic alliance with New Dehli,
attempting to enlist it fully in America’s efforts
to contain China and, presumably, in the process
punishing Pakistan for its increasingly enthusiastic
role in the Belt and Road Initiative.
In
the Western Pacific, the U.S. has
stepped up its
naval patrols and forged new basing arrangements
with local powers -- all with the aim of confining
the Chinese military to areas close to the mainland.
In response, Beijing has sought to escape the grip
of American power by establishing miniature bases on
Chinese-claimed islands in the South China Sea (or
even
constructing
artificial islands to house bases there) -- moves
widely condemned by the hawks in Washington.
To
demonstrate its ire at the effrontery of Beijing in
the Pacific (once
known
as an “American lake”), the White House has
ordered an increased pace of so-called
freedom-of-navigation operations (FRONOPs). Navy
warships regularly sail within
shooting range of
those very island bases, suggesting a U.S.
willingness to employ military force to resist
future Chinese moves in the region (and also
creating situations in which a
misstep could lead
to a military incident that could lead... well,
anywhere).
In
Washington, the warnings about Chinese military
encroachment in the region are already reaching a
fever pitch. For instance, Admiral Philip Davidson,
commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific,
described the
situation there in recent congressional testimony
this way: “In short, China is now capable of
controlling the South China Sea in all scenarios
short of war with the United States.”
A
Long War of Attrition
As Admiral
Davidson suggests, one possible outcome of the
ongoing cold war with China could be armed conflict
of the traditional sort. Such an encounter, in turn,
could escalate to the nuclear level, resulting in
mutual annihilation. A war involving only
“conventional” forces would itself undoubtedly be
devastating and lead to widespread suffering, not to
mention the collapse of the global economy.
Even
if a shooting war doesn’t erupt, however, a
long-term geopolitical war of attrition between the
U.S. and China will, in the end, have debilitating
and possibly catastrophic consequences for both
sides. Take the trade war, for example. If that’s
not resolved soon in a positive manner, continuing
high U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports will severely
curb Chinese economic growth and so
weaken the world
economy as a whole, punishing every nation on Earth,
including this one. High tariffs will also increase
costs for American consumers and
endanger the
prosperity and survival of many
firms that rely on Chinese raw materials and
components.
This
new brand of war will also ensure that already
sky-high defense expenditures will continue to rise,
diverting funds from vital needs like education,
health, infrastructure, and the environment.
Meanwhile, preparations for a future war with China
have already become the number one priority at the
Pentagon, crowding out all other considerations.
“While we’re focused on ongoing operations,” acting
Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan reportedly
told his senior
staff on his first day in office this January,
“remember China, China, China.”
Perhaps the
greatest victim of this ongoing conflict will be
planet Earth itself and all the creatures, humans
included, who inhabit it. As the world’s top two
emitters of climate-altering greenhouse gases, the
U.S. and China must work together to halt global
warming or all of us are doomed to a hellish future.
With a war under way, even a non-shooting one, the
chance for such collaboration is essentially zero.
The only way to save civilization is for the U.S.
and China to declare peace and focus together on
human salvation.
Michael
T. Klare, a
TomDispatch regular,
is the five-college professor emeritus of peace and
world security studies at Hampshire College and a
senior visiting fellow at the Arms Control
Association. His most recent book is
The Race for What’s Left.
His next book, All Hell Breaking Loose: Climate
Change, Global Chaos, and American National Security,
will be published in 2019.
Follow
TomDispatch
on
Twitter and join us
on
Facebook. Check out
the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new
dystopian novel (the second in the Splinterlands
series)
Frostlands,
Beverly Gologorsky's novel
Every Body Has a Story,
and Tom Engelhardt's
A Nation Unmade by War,
as well as Alfred McCoy's
In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and
Decline of U.S. Global Power
and John Dower's
The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since
World War II.
Copyright
2019 Michael T. Klare
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==See Also==
John Pilger: The Coming War on China
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