Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Trump keeps spoiling US Asia policy

- BY HUNTER MARSTON

Recent brinkmansh­ip between the United States and Iran is the latest signal of Washington’s distractio­n from great power competitio­n with China. The crisis in the Middle East and impeachmen­t proceeding­s in Washington, have distracted the Trump administra­tion from its stated emphasis on the Indo-pacific as its priority theatre.

In many official statements and documents, including the 2017 National Security Strategy and Vice President Mike Pence’s China speech at the Hudson Institute in October 2018, the administra­tion has articulate­d a strategy of great power competitio­n with China in a bid to promote US values and contain China’s rise. The Trump administra­tion’s ‘Free and Open Indo-pacific Strategy’ offers a broad vision for US Asia policy across economic, security and diplomatic dimensions.

On the economic front, the Trump administra­tion passed the BUILD Act in October 2018. This is a response to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and aims to compete with the BRI by creating a new finance corporatio­n with a significan­tly expanded lending capacity of US $ 60 billion to mobilise US private investment in developing countries.

In the South China Sea, the Trump administra­tion has regularise­d US freedom of navigation operations to counter China’s expansive maritime claims and signal US resolve in the region. In August 2019, the administra­tion elevated US diplomatic efforts in the Pacific with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s trip to Micronesia — the first by a US Secretary of State.

US officials have worked hard to address regional misgivings — from wariness of the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue, involving Australia, India, Japan and the United States, to grumblings from ASEAN. But US President Donald Trump’s erratic cost imposition­s, such as demanding Japan and South Korea pay up to five times current levels to continue hosting US troops, undermine US credibilit­y abroad and threaten to scuttle larger policy objectives.

The fundamenta­l problem with the Trump administra­tion’s policies is Donald Trump himself.

President Trump continues to blast allies and partners for what he sees as unfair trade practices. He views the world in raw transactio­nal terms and holds onto outdated and easily debunked notions of basic economics.

signals Trump to Beijing also sends on crises, inconsiste­nt including the ongoing trade war, protests in

Hong Kong and the internment of nearly a million Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang. Instead of defending the US values of human rights and democracy, he has dismissed China’s shocking abuse of citizens and identified with the strongman style of Chinese leader Xi Jinping, whom he describes as a friend.

Security and The Russia White Strategy House’s threaten posits 2017 American that National China interests and security abroad. But Trump’s behaviour and words overtly contradict his administra­tion’s stated policies. Trump has ceded important ground to Russia in Syria and continues to denigrate Ukraine in its struggle for independen­ce following the invasion by Moscow’s security forces. The looming crisis with Iran may lend further strategic advantage to Russian leader Vladimir Putin in the Middle East, according to Strobe Talbott and Maggie Tennis.

Worse still, in November 2019, the administra­tion rankled US allies by demanding that Japan pay four times and South Korea pay five times what they currently do to host US military personnel and bases on their territory. These have already proven difficult demands to even begin negotiatin­g. Leaders in Tokyo and Seoul face domestic constituen­cies for whom the US military presence is controvers­ial. Calls to raise payments for US troops place added stress on already weakened US credibilit­y under Trump.

In Southeast Asia, the Trump administra­tion has signalled disinteres­t by failing to show up for important regional summits despite US officials describing it as a ‘priority theatre’. Trump declined to attend for the second year in a row the East Asia Summit — the foremost regional forum for Southeast Asian countries, China, Japan, the United

States and other ASEAN partners — to the obvious disappoint­ment of US partners. By comparison, former president Barack Obama attended every East Asia Summit except one in 2013 due to a US government shutdown.

When the United States sent Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross and National Security Adviser Robert O’brien to represent the Trump administra­tion at the US–ASEAN Summit in November 2019, only three of 10 ASEAN leaders attended the meeting with O’brien. It didn’t help the United States’ reputation in Southeast Asia when a US diplomat complained about the perceived ‘effort to embarrass’ Trump.

Esper tour Philippine­s US of Secretary followed South and Korea, Vietnam. up of with Defence Thailand, a In regional Manila, Mark the where Washington has lost influence since President Rodrigo Duterte came to power in 2016, the Secretary agreed to a review of the US– Philippine­s Mutual Defence Treaty, which dates back to 1951, in a bid to reaffirm US credibilit­y.

In Vietnam, Secretary Esper announced that the United States would transfer another Coast Guard cutter to the country — following a similar transfer of a Hamilton-class Coast Guard cutter in 2017. Hanoi has welcomed increased security ties with Washington in light of recent aggression from China in waters they claim in the South China Sea. But Vietnam may be one of the only remaining bright spots for the Trump administra­tion’s Asia policy.

With impeachmen­t hearings dogging Trump as he enters a tumultuous election year in Washington, the Indo-pacific will not be his top priority. In this context, capable bureaucrat­s may be able to rescue a faltering US Asia strategy, but they have a long way to go to rebuild US credibilit­y among allies and partners in the region. (Courtesy East Asia Forum) (Hunter Marston is a PHD candidate in Internatio­nal Relations at the Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, The Australian National University)

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