The Jerusalem Post

Obama’s Asia Pivot is in full, disastrous swing under Trump

- COMMENT By MARKOS KOUNALAKIS

Characteri­zing himself as “America’s first Pacific president,” Barack Obama tried to shift America’s focus, strategic commitment­s and resources to Southeast Asia. Hillary Clinton was all for it, too, authoring a 2011 vision for an Asia-focused foreign policy titled “America’s Pacific Century.”

President Donald Trump – consciousl­y or not – is now suddenly fast-tracking the Obama-Clinton policy goal with his new, crisis version of the “Asia Pivot.”

North Korean nuclear blasts and missile testing met by intransige­nt American rhetoric and military might have suddenly and intensivel­y led to a rapid, if perhaps accidental, Asia Pivot 2.0. This new pivot is made up of more guns and less butter. If the Clinton-Obama policy led with trade, the Trump Pivot leads with tirade.

This quickly evolving Trump pivot is now in full swing, being implemente­d more by circumstan­ce and reaction than design. A hydrogen bomb can focus the mind and crystalliz­e a new policy. All the world’s eyes are watching to see how it plays out as miscalcula­tion, mistake or failure could be catastroph­ic.

Trump’s Asia pivot relies less on reassuring allies than on military buildup and sales. America is increasing new regional military deployment­s. Hard power is combined with harsh words dominated by Trump’s trademark abrasive speech and more confrontat­ional approach towards a rapidly rising China. Asian nations feel the heat and insecurity from the region’s increased tensions, shifting power, and threatened trade. In response, they seek greater security and more American weaponry. All this adds up to a rebalance of power.

President Trump has aggressive­ly shined the spotlight on China’s culpabilit­y for the North Korean regime’s survival. Beijing is being called out for long supporting Pyongyang, allowing or perhaps even encouragin­g it to be an internatio­nal irritant. Now China must reckon with the sovereign Frankenste­in it helped create, having over the years enabled the rogue nation and Kim-clan to now credibly threaten the global peace.

North Korea, however, is not the only regionally destabiliz­ing project pursued by the Chinese. Beijing has used its size and economic strength to remind its neighbors who rules the regional roost. It constructs new militarize­d islands and challenges those who freely ply internatio­nal waters it claims. The pivot is meant to counter these moves.

Started by President George W. Bush in 2008, the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade accord Obama later sought to sign was the centerpiec­e of the Asia pivot, seeing increased regional trade and tightening commercial bonds as a less threatenin­g approach to countering China’s growing power. TPP was central to the Bush-Obama pivot. Trump dumped that powerful tool, preferring increased arms sales to added trade deficits.

Trump’s TPP retreat was seen widely as an unforced error, signaling a lack of American interest in Asian economic security and an invitation for Chinese regional economic domination. Chinese President Xi Jinping’s consolidat­ing leadership and a post-TPP regional opening for China made the neighborho­od nervous. Asian countries grew anxious that an economical­ly powerful, militarily growing and unchecked China would set new rules and force conditions favorable to Beijing. Xi’s economic infrastruc­ture plan, the “one belt, one road” initiative, was beginning to look to some more like a one noose policy.

That anxiety spread quickly to Japan, which is in the middle of shifting from a previously pacifist posture to one of a more militarize­d and mobilized nation. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who made an early trip to Trump Tower, is now coordinati­ng in a more robust way with America and its forces to make sure that missiles flying overhead are not hanging over Tokyo’s head like the sword of Damocles.

Seoul is currently on ice as Trump asserts he will not be blackmaile­d over South Korea. In his uniquely tortured and torturing communicat­ions, he dressed down new South Korean leaders, calling them appeasers. Trump lets the trade imbalance with the US imply American ennui about Seoul’s fate. From a Trump economic nationalis­t perspectiv­e, South Korea is an export-oriented trade parasite. His seeming indifferen­ce to South Korea is a cold and callous negotiatin­g calculus applied to tell Kim Jong Un he is calling his bluff. It is an incendiary game of chicken with potentiall­y dire consequenc­es. As Defense Secretary Jim Mattis put it, a North Korean attack would reap a “massive military response.”

Trump came into office with an unfamiliar and unpredicta­ble rhetoric that is now translatin­g into a set of unintended foreign policies and strategic directions. Global dynamics have rapidly evolved his initial and instinctua­l populist approach into a course of confrontat­ional actions, regional rebalancin­g, and geopolitic­al recalculat­ion.

The latest developmen­t of this reactive approach is an increased American presence and forward posture that Bush, Obama and Hillary Clinton desired, but failed to implement fully. Trump’s comes much faster, furiously and with greater risks than the incrementa­l strategic approach previous administra­tions sought. A rawer, unapologet­ic and aggressive Bush-Obama-Clinton Asia pivot is now fully underway. As in basketball, however, a quick, hard pivot always runs the risk of an epic fall.

- TNS The writer is a senior fellow at Central European University and visiting fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n.

 ?? (Lan Hongguang/Xinhua/Sipa USA/TNS) ?? CHINESE PRESIDENT Xi Jinping, right, meets with his US counterpar­t, Donald Trump, in the latter’s Florida resort of Mar-a-Lago in April.
(Lan Hongguang/Xinhua/Sipa USA/TNS) CHINESE PRESIDENT Xi Jinping, right, meets with his US counterpar­t, Donald Trump, in the latter’s Florida resort of Mar-a-Lago in April.

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