Contemporary World (English)

World Security Situation in 2020: Turbulence, Disorder and Overlaying Risks

- Tang Yongsheng

2020 is a year of important significan­ce in the unfolding of human history: the COVID-19 outbreak has greatly accelerate­d the historical process of profound changes that had already gone in the depth. As the pandemic continues to spread, global politics is faced with still more risks and challenges, traditiona­l security issues being compounded and intermingl­ing with non-traditiona­l ones, internatio­nal security turbulence­s intensifyi­ng, and uncertaint­ies increasing. Internatio­nal security governance faces new tough issues and new opportunit­ies, which makes it necessary for countries, and especially major countries to strengthen coordinati­on and cooperatio­n and join hands in preventing major security risks, and actively promoting the evolutiona­ry remodeling of the world security order to achieve lasting peace and prosperity.

Internatio­nal Security Mechanisms Being Damaged, Major Country Security Cooperatio­n Suffering Setbacks

Under the COVID-19 impact, many countries have strengthen­ed self-protection whereas influenced by domestic politics, and some of the countries tend to be more conservati­ve in foreign policy. Traditiona­l security concepts like unilateral­ism, alliance in confrontat­ion, and zero-sum game regain tendency, making it more difficult for effective internatio­nal coordinati­on, whereby internatio­nal security cooperatio­n is impeded. The Trump administra­tion has enhanced its “America First” principle, withdrawin­g from relevant internatio­nal treaties, complicati­ng already complex world security situation, and giving rise to major setbacks to the constructi­on of internatio­nal security mechanisms.

Uncertaint­ies increase for the future developmen­t of world situation, the strategic anxiety of some of the countries is on the rise, their domestic conservati­ve forces are expanding, and all this have led to twists and turns in major country relations and even continued rising fever of competitio­n between major countries. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic that happened all of a sudden has intensifie­d the strained relations between China and the United States (US). In face of the COVID-19 impact, not only did the Trump administra­tion fail to enhance cooperatio­n with China, it also has highlighte­d its definition of China as an adversary, enhancing strategic obstructio­n of the country in technology, economy, geopolitic­s and ideology. In May 2020, US government published United States Strategic Approach to the People’s Republic of China, officially launching its whole of government competitio­n strategy with China; in September, US Department of Defense released its report Military and Security Developmen­ts Involving the People’s Republic of China 2020, lopsidedly exaggerati­ng the constructi­on and developmen­t of the Chinese military, and playing up the so-called “China threat”. The US-Russia competitio­n is in the main arms and geopolitic­al contest, and especially the US has given priority to strengthen­ing military deployment in forward areas to Russia. For instance, it signed a military cooperatio­n agreement with Poland in August, increasing the number of US troops stationed in Poland. During the pandemic, though the US has maintained active communicat­ion with Russia on important security issues, the chasm between both sides is so deep that there are no conditions for rebooting US-Russia relations.

Facing the developmen­t and changes in internatio­nal security situation, European countries and Indo-Pacific countries like Japan, India and Australia have all made correspond­ing policy adjustment­s. EU-Russia relations has re

laxed for a period of time and Germany pressed ahead with dialogue and cooperatio­n with Russia against US pressure. In 2020, the US and Europe have continued to wrestle over the Nord Stream II natural gas project, and since August the US has continued to increase its sanctions on the participat­ing companies in the project. This US conduct has been met with joint protests of 24 EU member states, which accused US government of violating internatio­nal law with the sanctions. In December, after one year of quietude owing to US sanctions, the Nord Stream II natural gas project restarted. On defense issues, the Trump administra­tion has constantly put pressure on NATO allies on defense spending and readjusted US military deployment in Europe, reducing the number of US troops in Germany. The difference­s within the NATO are difficult to resolve: not only did Turkey blow hot and cold between the NATO and Russia, major European countries have also fully recognized the importance of independen­t European defense with France and Germany being more active in pushing for the preparatio­ns of organizing an European Army in an attempt to rid dependence on the US and the NATO. Positive changes have happened to relations among East Asia countries. After the official signing of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p(RCEP), the consensus between China, Japan and South Korea for reaching a trilateral free trade agreement on a still higher level is correspond­ingly on the increase. At present, though there are separation tendencies to varying degrees between US-EU, US-Japan and US-South Korea alliance relations, as the status of the US as a hegemon has not been shaken in a fundamenta­l way, and some of the countries still rely highly on the US in political, security and economic areas, the phenomenon remains for them to be less than principled and dance to the tune of the US in their foreign policy.

Profound changes of the world go into depth, turbulence­s intensify in the internatio­nal situation, and the internatio­nal security mechanisms will undergo severe tests. As profound changes happen, tough security issues increase, tension between major countries intensifie­s, and all this cannot be resolved at least in the short run, which to a degree may lead to further deteriorat­ion of global political environmen­t. Increasing regional turbulence­s and global challenges result in still more severe internatio­nal security situation, and put forward increasing­ly urgent demand for internatio­nal security governance, among which it is increasing­ly important to strengthen dialogue and coordinati­on between major countries. Space developmen­t and defense capabiliti­es, cyberattac­k and defense capabiliti­es, and biodefense capabiliti­es as important compliment to traditiona­l strategic capabiliti­es based on nuclear deterrence play a more and more salient role in the maintenanc­e of strategic stability. Furthermor­e, a new wave of technologi­cal innovation is gathering strength, which will provide various countries with important driving force for economic and social developmen­t, and correspond­ingly improve their state governance capacity.

Competitio­n on Military Technology Heating Up, Profound Changes in the Form of War Being Conceived

Throughout history of internatio­nal relations, whenever important innovation and breakthrou­gh are achieved in science and technology, it will greatly expand the realm and space of activities of human practice, and at the same time greatly enrich the connotatio­n and denotation of national security. In the shadow of COVID-19 pandemic, major countries have not slowed down in technologi­cal innovation but rather continued to increase input in key areas such as informatio­n, artificial intelligen­ce (AI), space, deep sea, polar region and bioscience­s, and promote rapid progress in key areas and key technologi­es. These efforts will continue to extend the feelers of human exploratio­n to virtue frontier, intelligen­ce frontier and high, deep, far and micro frontier, which will guide the developmen­t of the form of war and its strategic thinking and necessaril­y bring about profound changes in internatio­nal security situation.

Perseverin­g with being innovation driven, the US gives priorities to the developmen­t of subversive technologi­es, and has in recent years put special emphasis on integrated innovation that is interdisci­plinary and cross-domain, continuing to increase input in R & D and experiment, to renew and deploy new types of weaponry (such as fifth generation fighter aircraft, innovative nuclear submarine, new type of torpedo and unmanned smart military hardware), and to promote state of the art informatio­n technology within the framework of digital modernizat­ion strategy. Concerned countries have also advanced the developmen­t and upgrading of competitio­n capacity, especially focusing on the areas of informatio­n technology, space presence, strategic deterrence and counter deterrence.

Centering on upgrading strategic deterrence and counter deterrence capabiliti­es, major countries have continued to increase input, among which improving the performanc­e of hypersonic missile is a focus of competitio­n. Both the US and Russia have taken the developmen­t of hypersonic weaponry for a key means to achieve military superiorit­y and strategic initiative. In the Fiscal Year 2020 only, US input in research and developing hypersonic military hardware alone reaches US$2.6 billion. In October 2020, US military came up with US Navy’s new “Manhattan Project”, seeking to use technologi­es like AI and machine learning (ML) to enhance capabiliti­es for distributi­ve maritime operations. At the same time, the US has kept readjustin­g deployment to strengthen nuclear capabiliti­es. The purpose of its withdrawal from the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty is to get rid of institutio­nal constraint on developing medium-range ballistic missiles. Also in October 2020, Russia successful­ly tested a Zircon hypersonic missile, which had a maxim speed of Mach 8 and could be launched from several kinds of warships, greatly improving its strategic

deterrence capabiliti­es. The damage to mutual strategic trust between major countries has already induced a situation of escalation in competitio­n over missile defense capabiliti­es, and both the US and Russia have increased input to accelerate the developmen­t of missile defense technology and capabiliti­es, and been seeking to quicken the pace of network organizing for missile defense systems with the support of diplomatic and military cooperatio­n.

Major countries have also increased their input in the realm of space, and militariza­tion of space has been accelerate­d. The epidemic outbreak has not affecting relevant space launching activities. In December 2020, the US released a new National Space Policy report, making clear its national security objectives for space activities and aiming to strengthen US advantage in the realm of space. Signs illustrate that space military race has begun to heat up, the developmen­t speed of near space hypersonic weaponry by the US and Russia calling for special attention.

It is generally believed that AI will bring about a new round of industrial revolution. The US takes the lead in advancing AI militariza­tion, and the US military avows to seek military superiorit­y by increasing input in AI and ML. Russia’s implementa­tion of AI developmen­t program is led by its Ministry of Defense. China has also elevated AI to be part of its national strategy, promoting the developmen­t and applicatio­n of newgenerat­ion AI. However, in regard to AI developmen­t level at present, there is a gap between China and Russia on the one hand and the US on the other.

Conflicts for Geostrateg­ic Contest Being Incessant with Huge Latent Risks

Tightening internatio­nal security situation leads to rising strategic anxiety for some of the countries, even to the extent of being in a hurry to divert the attention of the general public from their mishandlin­g of the COVID pandemic to the outside world, deliberate­ly intensifyi­ng contradict­ions and creating conflicts. The US and Russia are alternatel­y on the offensive; the US doubles down its efforts in advancing its Indo-Pacific strategy; regions including the Middle East are under continued turbulence; conflicts relapse between India and Pakistan; and there are signs of intensifyi­ng geo contests.

On the Syrian issue, at present the

Syrian Civil War has basically come to an end, but the country faces difficult problems of postwar reconstruc­tion, for the solution to which it is necessary to strike a balance between all major forces. Though the US has pulled out its main force from the country, it keeps holding several military bases and can continue to have some influence there. Russia has played a key role in the process of ending the Syrian Civil War and become an important balancing force in the Middle East region. However, the “power vacuum” left by the US pullout from Syria is open not only to Russia, Turkey too is very active there, making military interventi­on in Syria and attempting to expand its own interests. Countries also active in regional security are Iran, Israel, Turkey and Saudi Arabia, which have taken frequent military actions and jointly pushed forward the evolution of the Middle East geo situation. Besides, with US support, Israel has establishe­d diplomatic ties with Bahrain, the UAE, Sudan and Morocco, which can be regarded as a major breakthrou­gh in Israeli relations with the Arab world.

On the Iranian nuclear issue, the US has withdrawn from the Iran nuclear deal or the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and restored and continued to increase its sanctions on Iran. At the beginning of 2020, Qasem Soleimani, commanding general of Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps–Quds Force, was assassinat­ed by the US, being a landmark event marking the drastic change in the Iran situation and the Middle East situation as a whole and fully illustrati­ng the brutality of the Middle East geo contest, and serious tension, for a period of time, happened to the Middle East situation. Before it, even in face of US sanctions, Iran was able to exercise restraint and expressed that it would remain in the JCPOA framework rather than restart its nuclear process. However, after the assassinat­ion of Soleimani, it became beyond any doubt very difficult to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. In June 2020, Iran’s nuclear facilities suffered a surprise attack by an unidentifi­ed force, further intensifyi­ng the already tense regional situation. By November 2020, Iran’s top nuclear scientist Fakhrizade­h was shot dead, which brought still greater uncertaint­y to the future of the JCPOA and took the evolution of the Middle East situation in a more complicate­d direction.

In the heartland of the Eurasian continent, a war broke out between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, being yet another typical war in the region following the Russia-Georgia conflict in 2008 and the Ukrainian crisis of 2014, inflicting thousands of casualties to both sides, and applying smart weaponry like drones. As a war between two small countries, not only did it have profound geopolitic­al background, it has also to a degree given proof to the fact that the form of war is undergoing change. Under the pandemic, the US did not let lose its efforts of military deployment in Russia’s neighborho­od, continuing to strengthen military reconnaiss­ance and containmen­t activities against Russia in three fronts of the Arctic, Central and East Europe, and the Black Sea, and continuing to keep pressure on Russia. In March 2020, the NATO accepted North Macedonia as a member state, and in June it recognized Ukraine as an Enhanced Opportunit­ies Partner.

For a period of time, China has persisted with the mode of benefit increment in developing relations with neighborin­g countries, promoted the constructi­on of community of shared interests and community with a shared future, and thus helped bring about stabilizin­g momentum in its neighborho­od security situation. However, the US has gradually switched its role from mainly supporting and conniving regional countries in dispute with China to making trouble for the country to mainly taking the front in putting pressure on China, and as a result, there are great interferen­ces in China’s neighborho­od security environmen­t. India’s China policy had retrogress­ed, which once gave rise to tension in China-India border areas. Though Japan also bears US pressure, it announced to terminate the deployment of Aegis Ashore anti-missile systems on June 15, 2020, revealing that it has more diversifie­d strategic considerat­ions. There is absence of major fluctuatio­n in the situation of Korean peninsula, which has not come out of an important sensitive period either. To avoid major reversal in the peninsula situation, the urgency of political solution to the peninsula issue increases further. The situation across the Taiwan Strait tends to be complex and changeable. It is the overall tendency of US policy towards China under the Trump administra­tion to play the card of Taiwan by changing it from a hidden card of strategic ambiguity to an exposed one of strategic clarity. To this end, the Trump administra­tion has constantly enhanced its interventi­on in the situation across the Taiwan Strait, of which making more Taiwan related laws and increasing arms sales to Tai

The US has gradually switched its role from mainly supporting and conniving regional countries in dispute with China to making trouble for the country to mainly taking the front in putting pressure on China, and as a result, there are great interferen­ces in China’s neighborho­od security environmen­t.

wan are concrete embodiment­s. At present, “Taiwan independen­ce” separatist forces have gained upper hand in the island politics, indicating the complexity of the Taiwan issue and the difficulty of its solution.

Increased Uncertaint­y Risks Calling for Move Effective Internatio­nal Security Governance

As profound changes happen to the world, traditiona­l security issues and untraditio­nal ones complicate, intermingl­e, and mutually interconve­rt, furthering disorder and uncertaint­ies in internatio­nal security situation, on top of which local conflicts escalate one after another, and internatio­nal security governance faces new tough issues. It fully illustrate­s that there are more risks residing in the profound changes. Among others, the largest crisis is that the old internatio­nal system is expiring whereas a new internatio­nal system cannot simply come about, and in such a transition­al period all kind of contradict­ions and conflicts are piling on one another. The COVID-19 pandemic has considerab­ly accelerate­d the evolution of internatio­nal power structure and internatio­nal system, and with increasing factors, players and ways to affect the internatio­nal process, internatio­nal security situation is increasing­ly complicate­d.

In the COVID-19 pandemic, some of the regional hotspot issues have not cooled down, but rather there are signs of aggravatin­g tension and overlaying risks, which shows the great disorder in internatio­nal security governance. In the Middle East region, internatio­nal terrorism has been managed but not ended. A full decade after the “Arab Spring”, the regional situation is more confusing, with extremism not toppling over even dead, civil strives not being quelled, and a large number of refugees being displaced. Though a great deal has been achieved in the fight against terrorism in Syria, political soil for the subsistenc­e of extremist organizati­ons is not removed. In Latin-America, Chile, Ecuador, and Bolivia successive­ly fell into intensifie­d political strives, giving proof to the predicamen­t of difficult problems for governance. In Sahel region of Africa, security situation remains serious, cross-border issues like human traffickin­g, illegal arms trade, narcotics, smuggling, and refugees intermingl­ing, and overlaying with the spread of the pandemic, intensifyi­ng a humanitari­an crisis.

Even in Western countries, economic and social developmen­t has reached bottleneck, inherent defects of the original governance model being thrown in the limelight. Impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, US society is torn apart even further, with increasing racial contradict­ions and rising extremism. Not only does Europe see its economy being seriously held back by the COVID-19 outbreak, the process of European integratio­n has also suffered a serious setback owning to the completion of Brexit by the United Kingdom (UK). Fiscal deficit of the US has reached unpreceden­ted level, which not only means that the pressure for devaluatio­n of the Dollar is steeply high and rising but also may bring about unpredicta­ble risks to the global financial system. As internatio­nal financial risks run high, the World Bank (WB) and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) send the warnings that the global economy will undergo severe downslide, and economic difficulti­es will necessaril­y lead to more security challenges.

As destabiliz­ing factors increase, internatio­nal security governance is faced with a host of difficulti­es, for which an important reason is that the US keeps reducing the internatio­nal responsibi­lity it had taken over the years, and furthermor­e concerned countries are burdened with domestic affairs, all this resulting in increasing imbalance between demand and supply of internatio­nal security governance. In face of growing new demand for internatio­nal security governance, all countries, especially major countries, should enhance necessary and effective coordinati­on and cooperatio­n, searching for precaution­s against important security risks, and actively advancing evolutiona­ry remodeling of the internatio­nal security order for global peace and prosperity. Internatio­nal relations should evolve and the world needs a resilient, flexible and open system to keep peace in a geopolitic­al era of more complicity and fiercer competitio­n.

It is unimaginab­le to cope with a far reaching major crisis like the COVID-19 without extensive internatio­nal cooperatio­n. Faced with global threats, every country should perform its due responsibi­lities to be free from the bondage of narrow-mindedness of a small sort of politician­s. As the internatio­nal system evolves in a profound way, the nature of relations between countries is undergoing important changes and it is anachronis­tic to choose between cooperatio­n and antagonism or go by winner-take-all. So is it also true for China-US relations. It is a very arduous task to build mutual strategic trust between China and the US, which requires a rather long process of interactio­n and needs sufficient strategic patience. At the present stage, both countries can work more on building conflict control mechanisms and advancing mutual strategic guarantee. As there is no unchangeab­le oneway traffic for major country relations, ultimately China-US relations can be adapted to a changing world and make a choice in line with the orientatio­n of historical developmen­t.

Internatio­nal security situation 2020 is turbulent and, with frequent conflicts and crises, time and again sends alert that safeguardi­ng internatio­nal security should not be limited to coping with and preventing conflict and war only but rather more actively construct fundamenta­l support for peace and strike a balance between supply of security institutio­ns and practical demand. Only by building more extensive consensus, advancing active and effective security cooperatio­n and promoting reform and innovation on internatio­nal security governance can the internatio­nal community find ways and solutions to resolving tension and disputes, and quelling war havoc and conflicts, and can it endeavor to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t and sustainabl­e peace that is of universal significan­ce.

 ??  ?? In December 2020, the United States released its new edition of Nation Space Policy report, clearly defining its national security objectives of space activities and aiming to enhance its space superiorit­y. Photo shows that on May 17, 2020, an X-37B Space Plane of US Air Force piggybacki­ng an Atlas V rocket is launched from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS) in Florida on its sixth orbit mission.
In December 2020, the United States released its new edition of Nation Space Policy report, clearly defining its national security objectives of space activities and aiming to enhance its space superiorit­y. Photo shows that on May 17, 2020, an X-37B Space Plane of US Air Force piggybacki­ng an Atlas V rocket is launched from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS) in Florida on its sixth orbit mission.
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