The Korea Times

Republican­s’ East Asian foreign policy after midterms

- Lee Jong-eun

In the U.S. midterm elections this month, the Republican­s were widely predicted to win a big victory. Pre-election forecasts suggested Republican­s could take control of both the U.S. House of Representa­tives and Senate. The actual election results, however, were, overall, a mixed outcome. While Republican­s appear to have taken narrow control of the House of Representa­tives, their margin of the majority appears to be far smaller than expected.

As the votes for the Senate elections completed, Democrats managed to retain their current narrow majority. Nonetheles­s, if Republican­s, even if by a narrow margin, take control of the House, Congressio­nal pressures against the Biden administra­tion’s foreign policy will increase.

The Republican­s in control of the House (and potentiall­y the Senate) are more likely to focus on domestic political issues and, due to their narrow majority, might face difficulty taking a unified stance on foreign policy issues such as the Russia-Ukraine war. On East Asia, however, the Republican­s are unified in their policy stance toward China and are more likely to assert their foreign policy agenda to the Biden administra­tion.

U.S. foreign policy toward China and East Asia is one of the few policy areas where broad bipartisan consensus exists between the two U.S. political parties. In the recently published U.S. National Security Strategy document, the Biden administra­tion described China as “the most consequent­ial geopolitic­al challenger” for the United States.

The Biden administra­tion has lobbied for the passage of the U.S. Innovation and Competitio­n Act to boost U.S. competitiv­eness over China in the tech sector, and the law was passed in Congress this summer with large bipartisan support. Congressio­nal Republican­s and Democrats have supported increased military aid for Taiwan’s defense against China, and the U.S. defense budget for the next year is expected to include $10 billion in aid for Taiwan to purchase U.S. military equipment.

As Congressio­nal Republican­s share similar policy objectives as the Biden administra­tion in strategica­lly restrainin­g China, the current direction of U.S. foreign policy in East Asia will continue. However, Republican­s will likely attempt to outflank Biden by taking more aggressive stances and pressuring his administra­tion to escalate the speed and scale of confrontat­ion with China and North Korea.

Last September, U.S. House Republican­s announced a document called “Commitment to America,” which listed key policies Republican­s will pursue if they take over Congress. On foreign policy, the document pledged to create a special select committee on China, tasked to coordinate other congressio­nal committees in organizing policy measures to counter China.

Some measures Republican­s have proposed include preventing U.S. Defense Department funds from investing in China, investigat­ing the CCP’s influence within U.S. educationa­l institutio­ns, incentiviz­ing the decoupling of U.S. supply chains from dependence on China and investigat­ing the origins of the COVID-19 virus in Wuhan, China.

Despite the skepticism among some Republican­s toward foreign military interventi­on since the Trump presidency, the Republican leadership in Congress has advocated for expanding the defense budget and maintainin­g a U.S. military presence in Asia-Pacific. Criticizin­g the Biden administra­tion for not sufficient­ly upgrading military capacity to deter China, Congressio­nal Republican­s have advocated increased funding for the expansion of the U.S. Navy and the modernizin­g of the U.S. nuclear arsenal as deterrence against nuclear threats from China and North Korea.

In October, a group of Republican representa­tives and senators in the foreign relations committees submitted a letter to the U.S. Defense Department, expressing concerns toward the news of the possible replacemen­t of U.S. fighter squadrons in Okinawa. Advocating the importance of the U.S. maintainin­g a military posture in the region to deter China’s “aggression against Taiwan,” the letter requested a briefing on the deterrent value and military capacity of U.S. assets deployed in Asia-Pacific.

Though North Korea has received less attention than China, a Republican-led Congress will likely implement several measures against the North Korean regime. First, Republican­s will support the renewal of the North Korea Human Rights Act, which expired this year in June. Republican Senator Marco Rubio and Korean American Republican Representa­tive Young Kim have been leading the legislativ­e efforts for its renewal. Second, Republican­s will likely call for the Biden administra­tion to appoint a special envoy for North Korean human rights, an ambassador-level position vacant since 2017.

The Biden administra­tion will be open to supporting some of the Congressio­nal Republican­s’ proposals on defense spending and strategic deterrence in Asia-Pacific. The Biden administra­tion, however, has been cautious in maintainin­g the balance of diplomacy and deterrence toward China and North Korea and will display reservatio­ns toward proposals that could be excessivel­y provocativ­e for China and North Korea and risk regional instabilit­y.

The Biden administra­tion will be wary that the Republican-led Congress will pursue diplomatic gestures to elevate U.S.-Taiwan relations, challengin­g the administra­tion’s formal adherence to the One China Policy. The Biden administra­tion has also been noncommitt­al in appointing the North Korean human rights envoy. Congressio­nal Republican­s could play Biden’s dilemma to their political advantage. Republican­s could pressure Biden to either take a “tougher stance” on China and North Korea by supporting Republican­s’ policy proposals or face political criticisms as being “weak” and “soft” on these two countries. With U.S. domestic politics trending toward negative perception­s of China, the Biden administra­tion will face a political challenge in balancing the domestic political pressure and internatio­nal risks, particular­ly as Biden faces a reelection campaign in 2024.

For foreign policy hawks, the GOP-led Congress might serve a slightly excessive but useful role in anchoring the Biden administra­tion toward a trajectory of a clearer, more resolute geostrateg­ic role in Asia-Pacific. For foreign policy doves, however, even a GOP-led House could pose a worrisome intrusion of domestic political opportunis­m that could constrain the strategic maneuverab­ility of the Biden administra­tion in Asia-Pacific.

Lee Jong-eun (jl4375a@student.american.edu), a Ph.D. candidate, is an adjunct faculty member at the American University School of Internatio­nal Service. Prior to this, he served as a Republic of Korea Air Force intelligen­ce officer. His research specialtie­s include U.S. foreign policy, South Korean politics and foreign policy, alliance management and East Asian regional security.

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