By Peter Morici
Saturday, May 31, 2014
In a major address at West Point, President Obama once
again sought to articulate a foreign policy that places greater emphasis on
diplomacy, economic leverage and recourse to international law. Facing crises,
“U.S. military action cannot be the only – or even primary – component of our
leadership.”
All this assumes that the U.S. has a strong economy that
can deliver opportunities to nations that cooperate and withhold benefits from
those that don’t.
Too often, however, the Democratic or Republican
president has sacrificed U.S. economic interests in international trade and
investment deals that have neither adequately supported U.S. businesses and
workers nor effectively supported U.S. foreign policy objectives.
For example, the United States and its EU allies opened
their markets and access to technology to China in 2001 and Russia in 2012 by
approving their entry into the World Trade Organization. These deals were part
of broader strategies to integrate former cold war adversaries in a system of
global commerce and shared prosperity that has made war unthinkable among
former foes in Europe, Japan and the South Pacific.
Sadly some of the actors did not get the script.
China is using money it earns trading with the west to
rapidly modernize its navy and bully Japan, the Philippines, Vietnam and others
in Asia to cede sovereignty over disputed territory in the East and South China
Seas.
Russia has taken the dividends from selling natural gas,
nonferrous metals and machinery to Europe to modernize its army, steal the
Crimea from the Ukraine and bully other former Soviet states to think twice
about closer ties with the EU and NATO.
Similarly, Russia is using its natural gas sales to
Europe, and Gasprom’s control of critical choke points in the eastern EU’s
pipeline infrastructure to blackmail the Ukraine and warn others in Europe of
very cold winters if they don’t let it keep what it has stolen in the Crimea.
Opening U.S. markets to Chinese products and other trade
deals have proven no bonanza for the U.S. economy. For example, thanks to
Beijing’s high tariffs and administrative barriers to imports, currency
manipulation and other subsidies to its exports, and piracy of intellectual
property the U.S. economy is burdened with a $275 billion bilateral trade
deficit that is killing about 4 million jobs.
Of course, the United States has failed to play its
strengths by failing to develop its own abundant offshore oil. The resulting
$230 billion petroleum trade deficit is killing at least another 3 million
jobs.
Consequently, the U.S. economy has grown a paltry 1.7
percent annually since 2000—half the pace accomplished during the prior two
decades. Obama, short on revenues but eager to finance national health care,
food stamps and other entitlements, has sacrificed vital investments in troop
strength and equipment modernization.
Now, U.S. foreign policy has a double deficit—resources
and courage.
In Europe, the United States now lacks assets on the
ground to effectively challenge Russia’s incursions into the Ukraine. And
Angela Merkel can’t rally domestic support for stronger economic sanctions
against Moscow, because German multinationals are fearful of losing too much
business.
In the Pacific, the president is refusing to commit
American naval resources to confront Chinese ships that run off Philippine
fishermen and harass Japanese vessels, and generally violate international law
guaranteeing freedom of navigation.
Moscow wants back several parts of its lost empire and to
challenge U.S. objectives in places like Syria and Iran. Beijing is seeking
dominance in the western Pacific and to assert its authoritarian political
system as a viable alternative to American-style democracy.
Unless American diplomacy is backed up by a credible U.S.
military commitment, and an economy that can support it, Moscow and Beijing
will succeed to the peril of U.S. interests and our allies in Europe and the
Pacific.
In the end, U.S. presidents can’t continue pursuing
foolish international trade and energy policies, and sacrificing military
spending to increase entitlements popular with voters, without living in a much
more dangerous world.
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