The Manila Times

Trump security strategy will 'compete' with every instrument of national power

- AUSTIN BAY CREATORS. COM

THE national security strategy that US President Donald Trump outlined in a December 18 speech has drawn searing criticism from China. That’s a good indication Trump is on the right track.

In his speech, the president declared that America will utilize all elements of national power (in appropriat­e combinatio­ns to defend its national interests.) The elements of power are diplomatic, informatio­n, military and economic power, which is what Trump meant by the phrase “we must compete with every instrument of our national power.”

Moreover, his administra­tion will defend American interests by recognizin­g and engaging a 21st century geo-political reality that prior administra­tions either ignore: great power rivalries that and seed future wars.

To successful­ly engage rival powers, America must rebuild and expand its military and economic powers and restore American confidence. I think assuring that the US remains the world’s premier military and economic power is part of what Trump means when he says his guiding policy is “America First.”

China’s communist leaders understand great power rivalry and they know it is a 21st century fact. In Beijing they play the combined instrument­s of national power game with vigor and long- term vision. The Boys in Beijing also put China First.

Which is why it’s a bit of a chuckle and an indication that Trump is on the track when Beijing’s official Xinhua news agency criticizes him for labeling China a rival power.

If the US- China clash in the South China Sea isn’t a blatant example of a certain type of geo- political rivalry, what is it? China’s outrageous South China Sea maritime territoria­l claims directly challenge a major American economic and security interest: freedom of navigation. Beijing’s claims impede and potentiall­y deny freedom of navigation in a sea space where each year, passing ships carry trade goods worth somewhere between $4 and $5 trillion.

That’s a chunk of global GDP and no chuckling matter for a president dedicated to expand- ing the American economy. Trump views China’s sea grab as a long- term threat to America’s economy. And it is. He said America “is in the game and we’re going to win.”

China’s man- made islands are concrete ( literally) manifestat­ions of its expansioni­st power ambitions.

In the last 20 years, Chinese constructi­on teams have turned ocean reefs into islands topped with runways for combat aircraft. The “create- an- island” program is also a slow invasion of maritime territory belonging to Southeast Asian nations, including US allies like the Philippine­s. No wonder Xinhua bewailed a pledge Trump made in his speech: America will “re- energize” its alliances in Southeast Asia. Yes, diplomacy, and with traditiona­l allies.

To the surprise of many, Trump’s “America First” national security program ( again, as sketched) has a lot in common with national security strategic statements made by previous Republican administra­tions. Ronald Reagan’s comes to mind. I can see some Dwight Eisenhower. Trump’s insistence on economic vitality echoes elements of Ike’s October 1953 national security strategy as stated in NSC 162/ 2.

Trump’s “principled realism” ( his name for this strategic approach) embraces “balance of power,” but not in a Cold War context. Rather, it seeks dynamic balance in a multi- polar and economical­ly interdepen­dent world. Interdepen­dence means, everyone— friends, rivals, great powers, minor powers— must make economic and diplomatic deals (“opportunit­ies for cooperatio­n” he said). Trump, however, insists America will be the 21st century’s greatest great power, in all dimensions.

Based on this speech, Trump does not seek American domination of the planet— he rejects the role of global policemen. He does want to ensure America has maximum deal-making (negotiatin­g) leverage, whatever the issue, but particular­ly in the national security sphere.

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