Imperial Valley Press

Beijing’s balloon and practical Asia realities

- ARTHUR CYR Arthur I. Cyr is author of “After the Cold War” (NYU Press and Palgrave/Macmillan). Contact acyr@carthage.edu.

The large balloon launched by China, which drifted at a leisurely pace over North America until shot down by a U.S. F-22 fighter, is definitely an odd addition to internatio­nal relations. Given today’s advanced satellite surveillan­ce, along with other electronic­s plus human intelligen­ce agents, the purpose of this floating device remains puzzling – and intriguing.

By tangible contrast, there is no denying China has become aggressive in Asia, claiming territorie­s and waters well beyond establishe­d jurisdicti­ons. Conflicts are myriad and are occurring in the context of China’s massive, sustained military buildup.

At the start of February, the Philippine­s and the United States reached a major agreement to expand U.S. military presence to four additional military bases, beyond the five covered in the current Enhanced Cooperatio­n Defense Agreement. This is a dramatic turnaround from the U.S. military departure from the Philippine­s three decades ago.

Beyond military defense, steady growth of Asia regional trade agreements provides practical though indirect deterrence of China military ambitions. In November 2020, East and Southeast Asia nations signed the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) agreement at a virtual summit hosted by Vietnam.

The list of members alone is impressive: Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand and Vietnam. These nations account for just under one-third of the total population of the globe, and nearly one-third of the total gross product of the world’s economies. Two aspects of the agreement are particular­ly noteworthy. First, rules of origin are greatly simplified and standardiz­ed. These are the regulation­s that determine the country of origin of a product.

Previously, they varied widely among individual countries, imposing barriers to trade and hampering shipping and sales of products on a regional basis. In the future, there will be less obstructio­n of supply and distributi­on chains.

Second, this is the first comprehens­ive free trade agreement involving China, Japan and South Korea. All three nations historical­ly have been at odds, and occasional­ly at war.

This comprehens­ive agreement builds on earlier much more limited accords of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). The larger concept was developed at the ASEAN summit held in Bali, Indonesia in 2011 and the first negotiatio­ns to realize the agreement were held in the 2012 ASEAN summit hosted in Cambodia.

The founding document of ASEAN was signed on August 8, 1967 by the foreign ministers of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Singapore and Thailand. This was during Vietnam War, and two years after the United States began comprehens­ive direct military involvemen­t on the ground in South Vietnam, while significan­tly escalating air operations against North Vietnam as well as generally within the region. An important later successful U.S.-led effort is Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC), conceived by Australia Prime Minister Bob Hawke. President George H.W. Bush embraced the effort, and APEC began in 1989. The U.S. remains an active partner.

The 2006 APEC summit in Vietnam is noteworthy. Vietnam’s leaders honored U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, a dramatic demonstrat­ion that economic self-interest, and the tangible benefits of trade and investment, can overcome even great political and ideologica­l divides.

Looking to the future, RCEP could eventually restrain China’s sustained, sizable military buildup. The United States should work toward that goal.

Philippine-U.S. ties became close during World War II. The BBC notes the new defense accord “has stitched the gap in the arc of U.S. alliances” from Japan and South Korea in the north to Australia in the south.

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