Global Times - Weekend

Pentagon’s strategy hypes ‘China threat’ in tough rhetoric to save waning hegemony

- By Wang Qi

Hyping the increasing “security challenge” and “threats” from China, the Pentagon released the Biden administra­tion’s national defense strategy on Thursday, which Chinese experts viewed as a product of fear and filled with Cold War mentality that damages world peace and stability.

Although the US has shown a strong willingnes­s to contain China, or engage in “competitio­n” as it is referred to in the report, its own power is not strong enough to support its tough rhetoric, and that makes the guideline-like strategy relatively empty, experts said.

The 80-page, unclassifi­ed report comes about two weeks after the release of the Biden administra­tion’s first formal national security strategy, which has been slammed by the Chinese Foreign Ministry for describing China as “America’s most consequent­ial geopolitic­al challenge.” That same rhetoric is continued in the Pentagon’s report, which described China as the “most comprehens­ive and serious challenge to US national security” that will determine how the US military is equipped and shaped for the future.

Unlike China, which poses a “pacing challenge” to the US, according to the defense strategy, Russia was portrayed as an “acute threat.”

The release of the US National Defense Strategy came along with two other Pentagon reports, namely the Nuclear Posture Review and Missile Defense Review, which claimed there was a “longstandi­ng nuclear challenge” from China and Russia’s growing arsenal, according a CNN report.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin said on Friday that as the country with the largest nuclear arsenal, the US hypes up major-power competitio­n and bloc confrontat­ion with a Cold War mentality.

“The US policy reflects its hegemonic logic of seeking absolute military superiorit­y and will stoke a nuclear arms race,” Wang said, “The US has strengthen­ed the role of nuclear weapons in its

national security policy and lowered the threshold for their use, which has increasing­ly become the source of the risk of nuclear conflict.”

Waning hegemony

According to some military experts, the Pentagon’s report seems to show off that the US has evaluated the change in the form of new technology under battlefiel­d conditions, formed a multidomai­n battle space mode and diversific­ation of military constructi­on.

“The Pentagon is trying to say that the concept of ‘integrated deterrence’ has entered the actual combat level, the essence of which is to build the war capability and operation mode of civil-military integratio­n, nuclear and convention­al weapons integratio­n, and the integratio­n of offense and defense by integratin­g resources at home and courting allies abroad,” Zhuo Hua, an internatio­nal affairs expert at the School of Internatio­nal Relations and Diplomacy of Beijing Foreign Studies University, told the Global Times on Friday.

However, it should be noted that the latest National Defense Strategy from the Pentagon views China as a source of a security threat to the US homeland, which is unpreceden­ted, Zhuo said.

In the Pentagon’s report, “defending the homeland, paced to the growing multi-domain threat posed by China” was listed as one of the top-level defense priorities. The word “homeland” is mentioned 35 times, and there’s one paragraph titled “Threats to the US Homeland.”

“China has no interest in stepping into the boxing ring with the US. We will do things at our own pace. China will never occupy Alaska or deploy missiles close to the US. In China’s view, it’s meaningles­s for the US to try to maintain military hegemony in the Asia-Pacific across the vast Pacific Ocean,” Lü Xiang, an expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times.

While China’s developmen­t is not in any way directed against the US, the increased presence of China in the Pentagon’s report indicates that there is serious concern and even fear in Washington about China’s possible overtaking of the US in national strength, Lü noted.

“By defining its relationsh­ip with other nuclear-armed states in terms of competitio­n rather than cooperatio­n and dialogue, the US will become increasing­ly passive, especially when it turned out that NATO members aren’t all that united in their conflict with Russia,” the expert said.

China is one of the biggest contributo­rs to global stability, and by treating China as a “threat,” the US is wasting its resources where they are least likely to be used, he said.

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