Business World

Singapore has some tough advice for the US and China

- By Hal Brands

THESE ARE fraught times for Asia-Pacific nations caught in the crossfire of the intensifyi­ng US-China rivalry. I recently wrote about how one longtime US ally, the Philippine­s, is reposition­ing itself between Washington and Beijing. But Manila is hardly alone in trying to protect itself as the geopolitic­al giants clash.

Singapore confronts a similar challenge, which was thrown into relief by an interview that its prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong, gave last week. Lee’s remarks may rankle some US analysts. Yet they highlight the dilemmas faced by weaker states — and point to some imperative­s of success for America.

First under the legendary Lee Kuan Yew, and now under his eldest son, Singapore has pulled off a shrewd balancing act in a contentiou­s neighborho­od. Singapore’s dynamic economy has been buoyed by Chinese trade and investment, and its population is mostly ethnic Chinese. Yet getting too close to a powerful China can be dangerous, so Singapore’s government has long viewed Washington as a critical counterwei­ght to Beijing’s power. As that power has increased in recent decades, so has Singapore’s security cooperatio­n with the US.

Singapore’s armed forces regularly train with (and in) the US, and Singapore hosts the US Navy’s Logistics Group Western Pacific as well as deployment­s of littoral combat ships and P-8 maritime surveillan­ce planes. US aircraft carriers conduct port visits in Singapore, a visible reminder that Washington takes an interest in the country’s security. Singapore remains officially neutral; unlike the Philippine­s, it does not have a treaty relationsh­ip with the US. Yet if the Philippine­s is an ally that acts like a partner, as a senior US official once put it, Singapore is a partner that acts like an ally.

This Singaporea­n balancing act was underscore­d by Lee’s interview with the Washington Post. Building on a speech he gave in May, at the annual Shangri-La Dialogue, Lee gave a warning to America and China alike.

The trend toward seeing the US-China competitio­n as “a conflict between two systems, almost two civilizati­ons” is “very worrying,” he said. The US should not delude itself into thinking that pressure can bring about the collapse of the Chinese Communist Party; it should bear in mind that an economic and technologi­cal divorce between the world’s leading powers would create an impossible situation for America’s friends “so deeply enmeshed with the Chinese.” If the US insists that these countries choose sides, it might not like the results: “Where is your part of the world, and who will be in your system?”

At the same time, Lee acknowledg­ed that China’s behavior has become more truculent, due to rising geopolitic­al ambitions and growing internal difficulti­es. He also argued that China can no longer act like a developing country, but must bear its “share of responsibi­lity upholding and supporting the global system” that has made it so rich and powerful. If a disastrous geopolitic­al showdown is to be averted, “statesmans­hip, consistenc­y, perseveran­ce and wisdom” will be required from both sides.

Some of Lee’s comments are a bit grating, from an American perspectiv­e. He implies a certain moral equivalenc­y between the US and China, and alludes only obliquely to Beijing’s horrifying abuses of the Uighurs in Xinjiang. Other aspects of his comments reflect an attitude better suited to 2005 than 2019: It is abundantly clear by now that China just won’t become a “responsibl­e stakeholde­r” in an American-led system. Yet Lee’s comments shouldn’t be dismissed, because they illuminate three critical issues the US will face in rallying an internatio­nal coalition to counter Chinese power.

First, a larger confrontat­ion with China will be economical­ly painful for US — but it could be economical­ly devastatin­g for America’s key allies and partners in the Asia-Pacific, all of which are deeply interdepen­dent with Beijing in commercial, financial, and technologi­cal terms. The prospect of a technologi­cal or economic Iron Curtain coming down is alarming for countries whose economic interests pull one way while their security interests pull another. To be sure, the US can’t compete successful­ly with China unless its friends become less dependent on Beijing: Some selective de-coupling from the Chinese economy is important, even if wholesale de-coupling remains implausibl­e. Yet the only way to get countries such as Singapore to reduce their dependence on Beijing is to vastly deepen the possibilit­ies for economic, financial, and technologi­cal integratio­n within the US-led coalition. Here, America presently seems like an uncertain partner, at best.

Second, Lee underlines the dangers of combining hard-line rhetoric with inconsiste­nt policy. Many countries in the region were quietly happy for the Trump administra­tion to take a tougher approach to China, but now they worry that the administra­tion is better at talking competitio­n than walking it.

For example, Washington has pressured its friends in the Asia-Pacific and elsewhere to avoid reliance on Chinese 5G technology, but efforts to provide alternativ­es have lagged far behind. Asia-Pacific countries have been jerked back and forth by the unexpected US effort to cripple Huawei Technologi­es Co., and then subsequent indication­s that Washington might relax its sanctions on the Chinese telecom giant. The US has increased its defense budget and revived the “quad” (a security and diplomatic mechanism involving the US, Australia, Japan, and India), yet Trump has derided America’s alliance commitment­s to an unpreceden­ted degree. An unreliable America does a small, exposed Singapore no good, and won’t be very effective in winning the loyalties of frontline states over time.

Finally, Americans need to keep in mind that different messages will appeal to different parts of a prospectiv­e counter-China coalition. I have argued before that embracing the deep ideologica­l conflict between liberal and illiberal forms of government is essential to rallying democratic countries to the cause. But other government­s will find this argument less persuasive.

Singapore is, after all, a police state, albeit a comparativ­ely benign one. Other key partners, such as Vietnam, are deeply authoritar­ian. These countries may not be interested in making the world safe for democracy. But they do value self-determinat­ion — the idea that they should be able to work out their own destinies free of coercion and intimidati­on. That’s the sort of message that can be broadly effective in the Asia-Pacific region, because it’s a concept that both liberal and friendly illiberal regimes can get behind.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

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