China Daily Global Weekly

Avoid falling into the ‘Indo-Pacific’ trap

US strategy will inevitably divide Asia-Pacific countries into blocs and induce confrontat­ion

- By ZHAO JINGFANG The author is a professor at the National Defense University, PLA. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Today, with the world entering a critical phase of great turbulence and tremendous changes, all countries are faced with a strategic choice of which way to go forward. President Xi Jinping, from the viewpoint of the “Asian Community of Shared Future”, has said the Asian people should cherish the hard-earned peace and developmen­t.

They also need to continue developing and strengthen­ing Asia, demonstrat­e Asia’s resilience, wisdom and strength, and make Asia an anchor for world peace, a powerhouse for global growth and a new pacesetter for internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

On the other hand, US President Joe Biden argued in March that the United States is at an inflection point, which occurs every three or four generation­s; therefore, it must seize the significan­t opportunit­y to lead the making of a new world order. It is to advance the “IndoPacifi­c” strategy, which takes China as the most serious long-term challenge, that the US seeks to remake the world order.

In contrast to China’s vision for the AsiaPacifi­c, the purpose of the US’ “Indo-Pacific” strategy is to maintain its hegemonic system under the pretext of pushing for regional freedom and openness, which runs counter to the interests of all countries and peoples in Asia.

On June 11, US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin delivered a speech at the 19th ShangriLa Dialogue in Singapore, titled “Next Steps for the US Indo-Pacific Strategy”, in which he proposed the steps the US would take in the future to advance its “Indo-Pacific” strategy.

Consistent with the US’ “Indo-Pacific” strategy report released on Feb 12 and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s recent speech on Washington’s China policy, Austin continued to emphasize the importance of pressing ahead with the “free and open Indo-Pacific” and rulebased internatio­nal order, accusing China of “intimidati­on” and “coercion” in the East and South China seas and on the Taiwan question, and vowed to strengthen the US’ alliance system and hold more bilateral and multilater­al military exercises and training to enhance solidarity and interopera­bility.

Lieutenant General Zhang Zhenzhong, deputy chief of the Joint Staff of the Central Military Commission, resolutely refuted the groundless accusation­s of the US side at a background briefing following Austin’s speech, and said the US’ “Indo-Pacific” strategy is a strategy that creates divisions, triggers confrontat­ion and breaks peace.

Given the historical developmen­t trend and the common aspiration­s of the countries in the region, the US’ strategy is destined for failure. First, the US’ future attempts to push its “Indo-Pacific” strategy will further divide the Asia-Pacific region into confrontat­ional groups or blocs, underminin­g regional peace and stability. The focal point of Austin’s speech is to strengthen the US-led alliance system to “shape the strategic environmen­t around China”, so as to maintain the US’ global hegemony.

The main idea behind this stratagem is to transit from the one-to-one engagement with China to many-to-one containmen­t of China. The key for the US to materializ­e this stratagem is to reconstruc­t or rebuild the US-led Asia-Pacific alliance system. For that, the US employs two sets of manipulati­ons.

One is to establish an Asian version of NATO — that is to say, to construct thick and multi-layered alliance mechanisms in light of the diversity of the Asian countries, and then connect the different mechanisms and weave these into a close network and finally bring its Asian allies into a homogeneou­s NATO-like alliance.

Two is to bring its Asia-Pacific allies and NATO allies together, by welcoming Japan, the Republic of Korea, Australia and New Zealand to attend the Madrid Summit of NATO in late June, as well as introduce NATO to the AsiaPacifi­c, thereby helping it to go global.

No matter which set of manipulati­ons the US employs, the aim is to reinforce the US to contain and suppress China. The outcome will inevitably divide the Asia-Pacific countries into blocs and induce group confrontat­ion, accelerati­ng the buildup toward a new Cold War. Such a situation would also seriously impact the centrality of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations in the region, and force the Asian countries, including ASEAN member states, to take sides between China and the US.

Second, the US’ future attempts to push forward its “Indo-Pacific” strategy will greatly damage the developmen­t atmosphere in the Asia-Pacific, which in turn would derail regional cooperatio­n and prosperity. Now, the Asia-Pacific region is the most powerful engine of global economic growth with the highest developmen­t potential.

While all this relies on the peaceful and stable security environmen­t and the adherence of the countries in the region to the developmen­tfirst principle, the Russia-Ukraine conflict has clearly shown that once the security logic gains the upper hand, a country’s developmen­t and regional cooperatio­n will be set aside and become the direct victim of the confrontat­ion among states. Over the last decade, the main theme of the pursuit of peace, developmen­t and cooperatio­n in the Asia-Pacific has experience­d two severe drawbacks due to the US’ strategic shifts.

The first time was in 2009, when the Barack Obama administra­tion announced the “return to Asia” strategy and then spread panic over security issues in the region, and subsequent­ly provoked a series of disputes over the Diaoyu

Islands and Huangyan Island in the East and South China seas respective­ly. Those incidents severely dampened the region’s aspiration for developmen­t and cooperatio­n, while the US pushed ahead its “pivot to Asia” strategy by taking advantage of the situation.

The second drawback is the US’ exploitati­on of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, by hyping up the “Russia-China axis” narrative and mobilizing its alliances against Russia around the globe to oppose China, with an aim to sever China’s economic relations with other countries in the region.

By doing so, the US is trying to bind its allies and partners into its “Indo-Pacific” strategic framework. The US aims to weaken China’s economy and by default strengthen its own dominance over the world economy, with the direct outcome being the total ruining of economic cooperatio­n results, including the economic prosperity which the ASEAN countries have striven for over several decades.

Third, the US’ attempts to implement its “Indo-Pacific” strategy could even trigger a conflict in the Asia-Pacific, dragging the region into the abyss of war. Recently, Canadian and Australian warplanes have conducted close-in reconnaiss­ance off the coast of China, which clearly constitute­s provocativ­e, unsafe and unprofessi­onal operations. These irresponsi­ble and hostile conducts are an infringeme­nt on China’s sovereignt­y and national security and undermine regional peace and stability.

As for the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the US fully supports Ukraine, supplying it with weapons and other military equipment, and drawing a wrong analogy between Ukraine and Taiwan. While saying that he will not send US troops to Ukraine to fight against Russia, Biden openly stated that the US would get militarily involved to defend Taiwan in case of a cross-Straits conflict.

On June 8, just before the meeting between Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe with US Defense Secretary Austin during the ShangriLa Dialogue in Singapore, the Biden administra­tion announced its fourth arms sales worth $120 million to Taiwan.

Such a move constitute­s gross interferen­ce in China’s internal affairs, threatens China’s sovereignt­y and national security, and seriously endangers peace across the Taiwan Straits. It will also send the wrong signals to the separatist­s on the island and further encourage “Taiwan independen­ce” forces to take more risks.

The Taiwan question is the most important and sensitive subject in China-US relations. The one-China principle is the political basis of Sino-US relations, and also serves as the redline that should never be crossed. More important, the Taiwan question is China’s internal affair, on which the Chinese side has no leeway for compromise.

The irresponsi­ble remarks and deeds of the US will further increase the already high tensions across the Straits, and could even spark a conflict between China and the US if the US side does not stop its provocativ­e moves. This would be catastroph­ic for the Asia-Pacific, and there will be no winner in such a situation.

Everything being taken into account, the code of Asia-Pacific security and prosperity is win-win cooperatio­n, not zero-sum confrontat­ion. The Asia-Pacific region ought to become a pacesetter for peace and developmen­t rather than an arena for geopolitic­al games.

All the designs to push the Asia-Pacific into a new Cold War by transformi­ng it into confrontat­ional blocs will fail. But to prevent the region from turning into a battlefiel­d, all countries in the Asia-Pacific including the ASEAN member states need to realize the truth behind the US’ “Indo-Pacific” strategy and avoid falling into the “Indo-Pacific trap” set by the US.

The US’ “Indo-Pacific” strategy harbors the US’ self-interests and evil intents, which will not gain the support of the people of the region and thus will lead to failure in the end.

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