By Mike Watson
Thursday, December 15, 2022
Taipei and Tokyo
Russia’s vicious attack on Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure
is drawing eyeballs and condemnations around the world, but an equally
important story is unfolding on the other side of Eurasia. For more than a
decade, Japan has been quietly countering China’s unfolding plan to dominate
Asia, and it is taking an important new step. After decades of quasi-pacifism,
Japan is initiating a massive rearmament program. When China looks to the east,
the sun is not the only thing it sees rising.
As Japan rearms, it is exacerbating one of China’s
thorniest dilemmas. The Chinese Communist Party rules a large country with an
immense population and great resources, but that country is surrounded by
powerful neighbors. Unlike the United States, which is bordered by Canada,
Mexico, and fish, China is in the middle of an unfriendly neighborhood. It has
four nuclear-armed neighbors — India, North Korea, Pakistan, and Russia — and
nearby are two others, Japan and South Korea, that can acquire nuclear weapons
as quickly as they deem necessary. Some of China’s smaller neighbors may not be
members of the nuclear club, but they do pose other problems. Burma’s continued
instability, some of which is due to Chinese instigation, threatens to unleash
chaos on China’s southern border, and Vietnam is a pugnacious if soft-spoken
opponent of China’s ambitions. Much like Kaiser Wilhelm before him, Xi Jinping
has aspirations of global preeminence, but to realize his ambitions, he must
find a way to seduce or neutralize his neighbors.
Xi is much further along this path than many Americans realize.
There is a popular misconception that China’s influence over North Korea is
enormous and North Korea would cease its belligerence if only the Chinese would
tell their vassal to get in line. This is overstated, but Beijing and Pyongyang
have reached a workable modus vivendi. Pakistan, one of the largest recipients
of Belt and Road projects, has deepened its long-standing collaboration with
China against their mutual adversary, India. Vladimir Putin has accepted a
subordinate role in his “no limits” partnership with Xi rather than reach an
accommodation with the West. He is meekly standing by as China undermines
Russian influence in the former Soviet states of Central Asia, and Russian and
Chinese aircraft now routinely conduct joint patrols near Japan and South
Korea, demonstrating that their militaries are becoming more interoperable.
Japan and India are the Asian pillars of a balance of
power against Chinese hegemony, and China is steadily working to encircle them
and knock those pillars down. China’s advances near the Persian Gulf and in the
Indian Ocean are well known at this point: The “string of pearls” that
stretches from China’s overseas base in Djibouti through the Pakistani port in
Gwadar to Sri Lanka’s Hambantota port, on which China acquired a 99-year lease
in 2017, leaves India vulnerable on all sides if a conflict with China breaks
out. Japan is slightly better off, but still in peril. As one Japanese
interlocutor told me, the country is facing dangers on three fronts. China and
North Korea threaten Japan’s west, Japan’s southwestern islands are already in
danger of Chinese encroachment, and as China and Russia grow closer together,
Japanese defense planners cannot rule out an attack from the north.
Taiwan is the key to Japan’s security. A consensus is
forming in Tokyo that keeping Taiwan out of China’s control is a national
interest for Japan. The Chinese Communists’ rhetoric about “reunification” with
Taiwan, which they have not controlled for a moment in the history of this
galaxy, distracts from a core issue about Taiwan. The island sits along the
trade routes that are vital for Japan’s economy. Fuel from the Middle East,
food, and a significant portion of Japan’s other trade come from the southwest.
If China gets Taiwan in its clutches, it will not only have Japan’s
southwestern islands in easy reach; it will also have its hands around Japan’s
throat. At that point, the pressure on Japan to make a deal with China would be
enormous, a deal that Americans would have a hard time stomaching.
Japan’s independence may very well be the pivot on which
the global balance of power turns. If China can neutralize Japan, or make it
into a vassal, Americans and their remaining allies will have little chance of
assembling a coalition that can compete effectively in the most strategically
important region in the world.
This is the nightmare that the United States has sought
to avoid since Great Britain lost its ability to maintain the global balance of
power. During the 20th century, when Europe played an outsized role in global
politics, hundreds of thousands of Americans died preventing Germany from
dominating Europe, and hundreds of thousands more with thousands of nuclear
weapons defended the industrial heartland of Europe from Soviet machinations
during the Cold War. If China can pull Asia into its orbit, it will achieve in
the 21st century what Germany and the Soviet Union could not in the 20th.
The United States would not automatically lose its independence
in this scenario, but it would be hard-pressed to defend itself, let alone to
assemble a new coalition to defend the free world. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s May
1941 speech about Hitler’s global ambitions is worth revisiting here: If Hitler
conquered Europe, he warned, Germany could set the terms for a new economic
order. American workers would be hardest hit. “The American laborer would have
to compete with slave labor in the rest of the world.” To survive, American
companies would have to go along with their new overseas masters. “Those in the
New World who were seeking profits would be urging that all that the
dictatorships desired was ‘peace.’ They would oppose toil and taxes for more
American armament.” Fortress America would be a poor backwater: “Tariff walls —
Chinese walls of isolation — would be futile. Freedom to trade is essential to
our economic life. . . . It would not be an American wall to keep Nazi goods
out; it would be a Nazi wall to keep us in.”
Americans have already gotten a foretaste of a
China-dominated global economy, and it is bitter. David Autor argues that the
“China shock” destroyed nearly six out of every ten lost manufacturing jobs
from 2001 to 2019. China is not stopping with lower-value manufacturing: It
aspires to shape global technology regulations to benefit Chinese companies
and gradually cut out Western ones. As Michael Lind warns, the United
States “could decline into a deindustrialized, English-speaking version of a
Latin American republic, specializing in commodities, real estate, tourism, and
perhaps transnational tax evasion.” China has already tried to ruin the careers
of Americans, such as Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey, who
supported Hong Kong protesters. Imagine how much freedom of speech we would
have if China could bring control of the global economy to bear on Americans
who criticize Chinese policy.
Fortunately, Japan is aware of the danger and is rising
to meet the challenge. The Japanese have received their own taste of China’s
belligerence. In 2010, China escalated a long-running dispute over the Senkaku
Islands by suspending exports to Japan of rare earth elements, a set of
hard-to-mine minerals that are vital for high-tech manufacturing. During both
of his stints as prime minister, the late Shinzo Abe maneuvered to prepare his
country, which has been wary of employing force since World War II and was
economically entangled with China, for the confrontation that he could see on
the horizon. Abe was one of the foremost advocates of the “Quad” partnership
with Australia, India, and the United States; he pushed Japan to reinterpret
its pacifist constitution so that it could take a greater role in providing
regional security; and he coined the phrase “free and open Indo-Pacific,” which
the United States has since adopted.
Japan has quickened the pace in the last few years. A
series of events has transformed Japan’s outlook on the global situation: The
Covid pandemic demonstrated that China’s governance system is a source of risk
for other countries, Xi could be even more assertive now that he has locked in
his third term at the helm of the Chinese Communist Party, Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine showed that great-power wars are back on the table, and the United
States has become a less reliable ally on which Tokyo can no longer necessarily
depend for security. Even my Japanese interlocutors who were the most
complimentary of Donald Trump noted that his election was not a sign of
American stability and predictability. Abe and Trump had a very close relationship,
which served the American and Japanese people well, but the Japanese cannot
rely on idiosyncrasies such as personal friendships when their country is at
stake.
Hence, Japan’s rearmament. The first step will be the
release of Japan’s new national-security strategy, which by all accounts will
identify the challenge before Japan with a frankness that is unusual in
government documents. Next, the government will drastically increase the
defense budget, from roughly 5 trillion yen (less than $40 billion) currently
to averaging over 8 trillion yen annually over the next five years. Having seen
Russia’s and Ukraine’s enormous expenditure of munitions and materiel, the
government is focused on buying munitions, spare parts, and other equipment
that the Japanese forces will need if a conflict breaks out in the next few
years. In addition, Japan will acquire new capabilities, such as long-range
missiles that can strike enemy missiles on the launchpad, and it will invest in
future high-tech capabilities in realms such as cyber and space. All told,
Japan’s armed forces will fast become much more formidable.
Americans can be heartened by Japan’s rearmament, but it
is a silver lining of a dark cloud that looms large. The United States has
asked its allies for years to shoulder more of the load, but it is not because
we have become more persuasive that they are moving in that direction. Rather,
they are acquiring more weapons because their neighborhood has become more
threatening and our security guarantees have become less convincing.
There is still much to do. A well-armed Japan will
greatly complicate China’s ambitions in Taiwan or anywhere else in the Pacific,
but there is no substitute for American power. Currently, the United States
plans to shed old ships and planes over the next decade in order to save money
and enter the 2030s with a modernized military. Since the American forces in
Japan are already significantly underequipped as China’s military buildup
continues, and thus the balance of power in the Western Pacific is tilting,
this is an extraordinarily risky strategy. The Biden administration has not
allowed the defense budget to keep pace with inflation, so the cuts will be
even deeper, and the modernization even farther off, than we realize. Congress
is adding $45 billion to this year’s defense budget, which will help but is
insufficient to meet the demands of the moment.
More capabilities are important, but so too is better
planning. Modern warfare is immensely complicated, and managing the various
aerial, ground, and naval components is challenging even for the U.S. military,
which has more experience with joint operations than most of its counterparts.
The Japanese and American militaries operate together frequently, but in a war
that could begin with massive salvos of supersonic missiles, speed would be at
a premium, and closer cooperation would be necessary. There is almost no
coordination between the Americans, Japanese, and Taiwanese, who would have to
fight together to stave off a Chinese offensive. This is not a recipe for
success.
After decades of struggling to take over, eventually
Germany accepted a smaller role in Europe’s affairs. Japan too has become an
important U.S. ally in part because the U.S.-led order has given Japan many of
the benefits that it desired before Pearl Harbor. There may yet come a day when
China accepts a role in Asia’s affairs that is beneficial to all. But Germany
and Japan did not come to those realizations quietly, and a conflict with China
would be catastrophic. Deterring China from taking up arms is the first step to
right-sizing its ambitions. It is one that the Americans and Japanese are
taking side by side.
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