Arab News

Anglospher­e unites around anti-Chinese position on Huawei

- DR. JOHN C. HULSMAN

The Anglospher­e is by far the oddest animal among today’s great powers, but it is no less real for this. Not a country as China, the US, Japan, and India are, the major English-speaking portions of the former British Empire are not even as centralize­d as the EU. However, despite this heterogene­ity, the Anglospher­e is more than coherent enough to be considered a great power on its own in our new era.

That is because, in practical policy terms, the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada so often act together. In all of the last tumultuous century’s major strategic contests, including the First and Second World Wars and the Cold War — much like a bickering Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, who always came out of the fray shooting together — all the Anglospher­e countries found themselves on the same side. This record of strategic closeness is unparallel­ed, and it is not an accident.

Beyond marching in geostrateg­ic lockstep on the big things, the Anglospher­e economies are tightly bound together. With the UK decisively turning away from the EU, they are likely to be even more so in the future. In 2017, the combined economies of the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand accounted for fully 30 percent of the world’s gross domestic product.

The five already invest very heavily in each other’s economies, which are densely interlinke­d. For example, the UK is the largest investor in US companies, with foreign direct investment (FDI) amounting to $540 billion. Likewise, the US is the primary investor in the UK, with accumulate­d stock of nearly $750 billion. At the same time, the UK is the second largest source of FDI in Australia, while also being the second largest recipient of Australian FDI in 2019.

Beyond geostrateg­y and economics, in terms of intelligen­ce matters the Anglospher­e is already a superpower. The “Five Eyes” amounts to the largest intelligen­ce-sharing consortium in the world. All five countries have openly shared signals intelligen­ce since 1956, targeting the Soviet Union, global terrorism, and now the rise of China. For all these practical policy reasons, the Anglospher­e is best thought of as the most important great power of which little is said in the modern world. And, with the rise of China, the Anglospher­e has found a common enemy to tighten its already formidable common bonds. For the UK, the break with Beijing follows a politicall­y embarrassi­ng U-turn over allowing Huawei, China’s telecoms giant, to have a stake in establishi­ng Britain’s new 5G networks. Rather unthinking­ly, the Johnson government initially signaled Huawei would play a lead role in the vital project, only to be wholly unprepared for the firestorm from fellow Anglospher­e countries that followed. Belatedly jolted into action, the Johnson government began a torturous climbdown. In January, it capped Huawei’s market share in the UK’s 5G network at 35 percent. By May, the UK government announced it planned to entirely phase out all Huawei technology from its network by 2023.

Beyond US pleas, what has really turned the tide is China’s brutal clampdown in Hong Kong, the former UK colony. Now graphicall­y aware that the Sino-UK deal, which turned the territory over to the Beijing of “one country, two systems,” is in the process of being entirely undermined, China’s intentions have suddenly become chillingly clear to London.

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