New York Post

Exploiting a weak Biden

- MARK MONTGOMERY Mark Montgomery is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s.

RUSSIA has massed nearly 90,000 troops near its border with Ukraine, while China is reportedly establishi­ng a military base in Equatorial Guinea on the Atlantic Ocean. America’s adversarie­s are wasting no time in taking advantage of the Biden administra­tion’s disorganiz­ed and unfocused national-security strategy.

Russia has relentless­ly attacked Ukrainian sovereignt­y since Moscow’s initial invasion in 2014.

Russian President Vladimir Putin initiated the current crisis with his decision not to withdraw Russian forces and equipment back to their home bases following Zapad 21, a large annual military exercise. These forces now threaten Ukrainian sovereignt­y and challenge Western assurances to support and defend democracie­s being targeted by authoritar­ian states.

Putin has been equally dismissive of President Biden’s warnings to cease and desist cyberattac­ks on our national critical infrastruc­ture.

China’s challenge is even more concerning. China’s massive and highly successful 20year military buildup has made US naval and air operations in the Western Pacific extremely risky. China now threatens US citizens in Guam with ballistic and cruise missile systems.

The Chinese navy actually has surpassed the US Navy in number of ships, and given the Chinese navy’s proximity to potential flashpoint­s in Taiwan, and the East and South China Seas, this reduces or eliminates remaining US military advantages in technology and experience.

China is now looking to spread its military influence outside East Asia. Beijing has a well-developed military base on the east coast of Africa in Djibouti (in close proximity to a smaller and less well-equipped US facility). The Chinese have garnered naval and air “access” to many commercial facilities through their Belt and Road Initiative investment­s, even gaining ownership of facilities following defaults of host nation borrowers. The latest report of Chinese investment­s in Barbados show Beijing wants to gain access in the United States’ backyard.

The Chinese investment in Equatorial Guinea is a longterm investment and more than the typical BRI “access grab.” This base could provide China with logistics and repair facilities on the Atlantic seaboard. This is not for today’s Chinese navy (which is still focused on the Western Pacific) but for their navy of the 2030s and 2040s. This strategic investment once again demonstrat­es

China’s extended vision of competitio­n with the United States and other democracie­s throughout the 21st century.

The Biden administra­tion needs to face up to these authoritar­ian challenges with a more direct and forceful strategy.

First, it should continue recent administra­tions’ efforts to ensure Taiwan is able to defend itself and initiate a formal military financial assistance program to this beleaguere­d democracy to accelerate the effort.

Next, invest in key US military capabiliti­es that put China’s military forces on their back feet, such as expanded submarine production.

Hold Russia accountabl­e with tough, high-impact sanctions for its abetting of ransomware attacks and cyber espionage. Specifical­ly, target the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline and advocate for Moscow’s removal from the SWIFT financial transactio­n system, a crucial link to the global economy.

Finally, we need a national-security strategy that identifies our adversarie­s clearly, explains the nature of the threats we face and details a long-term investment plan to ensure we can deter the threats and, if deterrence

fails, defeat the enemy.

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