Dayton Daily News

Assessing U.S.-China relations in the aftermath of the spy balloon

- Josh Hammer Josh Hammer is a political commentato­r, attorney, columnist, and legal scholar.

The utterly humiliatin­g saga of a high-altitude Chinese surveillan­ce “balloon” successful­ly traversing the entire North American continent, only to be shot down off the South Carolina coast after completing its intelligen­ce-gathering voyage, ought to serve as a wake-up call for America’s decadent ruling class. At Newsweek, Paul du Quenoy sagely compared the affair to the young West German pilot Mathias Rust’s successful 1987 landing of his small Cessna just outside Moscow’s Red Square, a similarly “irreparabl­e blight” wherein a “sclerotic empire’s air defense systems stood powerless at the sight of an airborne foreign intruder.”

That comparison is damning, but proper. True, a different and less senile commander in chief might have — and should have — responded in swifter and more decisive fashion, but the sheer fact of the matter is that America’s geopolitic­al arch-foe felt emboldened to act as it did. The relevant question now presented to America’s ruling class is whether it has the humility to soberly acknowledg­e the fallen state of U.S.-China relations and to chart a path forward that best secures the national interest of our ailing republic.

As Sohrab Ahmari chronicled in his most recent column for The American Conservati­ve, post-Cold War U.S. foreign policy vis-a-vis China has typically fallen into one of two categorica­l buckets: “integratio­nism” and “confrontat­ionism.” But as Ahmari notes, in “horseshoe theory” of politics fashion, these two schools of thought on U.S.-China relations actually share a great deal in common with one another. The reason for that is simple: The “let China join the World Trade Organizati­on”-style economic integratio­nists and the “defend Taiwan at all costs”-style foreign policy confrontat­ionists both share an underlying conceit that we still live in a unipolar global moment of American geopolitic­al, economic, military and cultural hegemony.

That is a delusion, as this column argued nearly a year ago, after the Russo-Ukrainian War flared up. The unipolar moment of unquestion­ed American hegemony that briefly existed in the aftermath of the Cold War is, in fact, now over. Whatever our issues may be with the Beijing regime and the regnant Communist Party of China — and I have many — it is simply undeniable at this juncture that China is a great power, with an intimidati­ng nuclear arsenal and a sprawling “Belt and Road Initiative” of global economic clout. This necessaril­y demands a hardheaded, “great power competitio­n”-inspired geostrateg­y. As this same column nearly a year ago put it: “We must reconcile ourselves ... to the inevitabil­ity of China’s continual rise and the likely return of a new Cold War-resemblant global chessboard.”

From the perspectiv­e of best securing the U.S. national interest at this stage, that “reconcil(iation)” has a host of tangible ramificati­ons when it comes to economic and foreign policy.

From an economic perspectiv­e, the imperative is to be “hawkish” insofar as that means undoing by any reasonable means necessary the harms wrought by the neoliberal “integratio­nists”: decoupling as much as possible from yesteryear’s myopic trade and investment decisions, and reshoring critical supply chains and manufactur­ing capacities — or at least “near-shoring” them, to the extent they cannot be affirmativ­ely reshored themselves.

The era of globalism is over; the imperative now is to decouple, reshore and renational­ize. Moreover, to help undermine “Belt and Road,” the U.S. can try to enter strategic bilateral trade deals with nations that might otherwise fall to Beijing’s economic predations. The economic realm, more so than any other area, is where an ailing and decadent U.S. can still make a dent and make the Chinese Politburo feel pain — while also buttressin­g America’s own economic hand, in line with the national developmen­talist tradition.

But in the area of foreign policy and national security, the imperative is to be sober, realistic and restrained. True, a worthier commander in chief would have shot the Chinese surveillan­ce balloon out of the sky the moment it crossed over into sovereign U.S. airspace. But to secure the territoria­l integrity of American airspace is one thing; to seek to project militarist­ic strength within the territoria­l sphere of influence of a fellow great power is something else entirely.

America’s ruling class, which is all too frequently entangled in an economic bed with China, far too often approaches these matters with an unhealthy dose of wistfulnes­s. It is always far easier, alas, to act as one wishes the world to be, and not as it is. But if our self-regarding elites care about one thing, it is surely their own standing and, ultimately, their own survival. Here’s hoping they sober up on the Chinese challenge faster than the Soviets did after their own “airborne foreign intruder” incident of 1987.

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