The West's focus instead should be on shaping a new security context for the economic relationship. It can do business with China while guarding against its expansionist intentions. This includes a more discriminating approach to limit western vulnerabilities. Germany, for example, is at last, looking hard at its economic reliance on the Chinese market. Trade diversification will loom large in the strategy document under preparation in Berlin. Volkswagen's dependence on China for about half of its global earnings looks reckless. The US has put in place a panoply of technology controls. Europe is belatedly looking more closely at China's investments in sensitive economic sectors. And, given Xi's ambitions, it is simply not sensible to rely on Taiwan more than four-fifths of the world’s most advanced semiconductor chips. Ties with like-minded democracies such as Japan and Australia are the obvious starting point for strengthening security arrangements in the Indo-Pacific. So too is a close relationship with India. The Indo-Pacific Quad comprised of the US, India, Japan and Australia offers a blueprint to widen and solidify relationships among other regional powers.
At its heart, the Quad is calculated to constrain China's ambitions. But it represents an alignment of interests rather than an alliance - hence the accommodation of India's refusal to impose sanctions on Russia. The Quad provides in parallel the core grouping of an emerging Indo-Pacific community of nations committed to economic integration, improved connectivity, and public goods. The binding thread is the shared interest in preserving a rules-based system.
It recognises - as did Biden's announcement this year of a new Indo-Pacific economic framework - that states reluctant to be seen lining up against Beijing, not least because of their economic reliance on China, can still be willing recruits to arrangements that bolster economic co-operation and underpin, for example, maritime security. The organising characteristic is flexibility. Participants do not have to sign up to "western values". The absence of a rigid institutional architecture and binding rules encourages plurilateral initiatives. These include so far a supply chain resilience project, the "blue dot" infrastructure plan and an international solar alliance. ASEAN has published its own Indo-Pacific "outlook", France has a long-standing military presence in the region plan and the European Union has sought to make its presence felt with its own Indo-Pacific strategy. Such arrangements will offend those attached to neatness and disturb those looking to draw a sharp line between democracies and autocracies. A democrats-versus-autocrats divide describes the world as we might like it to be rather than it is. (Where, incidentally, does Recep Tayypi Erdoğan's Turkey, a NATO member, fit in such a construct?).
The hegemony of the West is ending, power has become widely dispersed and rising states in the Global South are determined to make their own choices. The answer is not a rush to the Kissingerian "realism" of those who even now would bargain away Ukraine in negotiations with Putin. It is a recognition that in this complex, messy, contested world, the West is best served by restoring public faith in democratic institutions at home and a robust defence abroad of an international system based on the rule of law.
Copyright image: KENZO TRIBOUILLARD / AFP
Add new comment