To Counter China’s Rise, the U.S. Should Focus on Xi
A proposal for a full reboot of
American strategy toward China.
By ANONYMOUS
(Politico Magazine,01/28/2021)
The author is
a former senior government official with deep expertise and experience dealing
with China.
In 1946, the
American diplomat George Kennan wrote a lengthy cable to Washington—since
dubbed the “Long Telegram”—laying out the basis for the next several decades of
U.S. policy toward the Soviet Union. He published his work as an article under
the simple pseudonym “X.” In that spirit, a former senior government official
with deep expertise and experience dealing with China has published with the
Atlantic Council a bold and ambitious new U.S. strategy toward its next great
global rival. It is similarly delivered anonymously, which the author
requested, and POLITICO granted. Here the author describes the broad outlines
of the strategy. The full memo is available here.
The single
most important challenge facing the United States in the twenty-first century
is the rise of an increasingly authoritarian China under President and General
Secretary Xi Jinping. As Joe Biden assumes the presidency, it might be easy to
see China as an obsession of Donald Trump that he’d do well to move past. If
anything, the opposite is true: The American approach to China needs more and
more focused, attention, than any White House has yet given it.
This might seem like overstatement,
given the scope of challenges this country faces, but it’s not: Because of the
scale of China’s economy and its military, the speed of its technological
advancement and its radically different worldview from that of the United
States, China’s rise now profoundly impacts every major U.S. national interest.
This is a structural challenge that, to some extent, has been gradually
emerging over the last two decades. The rise to power of Xi has greatly
accentuated this challenge and accelerated its timetable.
At home, Xi
has returned China to classical Marxism-Leninism and fostered a quasi-Maoist
personality cult, pursuing the systematic elimination of his political
opponents. China’s market reforms have stalled and its private sector is now
under increasingly direct forms of party control. Xi has also used
ethnonationalism to unite his country against any challenges to his authority,
internal or external. His treatment of recalcitrant ethnic minorities within
China borders on genocide. Xi’s China increasingly resembles a new form of
authoritarian police state. And in a fundamental departure from his risk-averse
post-Mao predecessors, Xi has demonstrated that he intends to project China’s
authoritarian system, coercive foreign policy and military presence well beyond
his country’s own borders to the world at large.
China under
Xi, unlike under previous leaders Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao, is
no longer a status quo power. It has become what the international-relations
world calls a revisionist power, a state bent on changing the world around it.
For the United States, its allies and the US-led liberal international order,
this represents a fundamental shift. Xi is no longer just a problem for U.S.
primacy. He now presents a serious challenge to the whole of the democratic
world.
Xi is no longer just a problem for U.S.
primacy. He now presents a serious challenge to the whole of the democratic
world.
The
fundamental strategic question for the United States is what to do about it. It
is now a matter of urgency that this country develop an integrated, bipartisan
national strategy to guide U.S. policy toward Xi’s China for the next three
decades. Some will argue that the United States already has a China strategy,
pointing to the Trump administration’s declaration of “strategic competition”
as the “central challenge” of U.S. foreign and national-security policy, as
enshrined in the 2017 U.S. National Security Strategy. However, while the Trump
administration did well to sound the alarm on China, its efforts at
implementation have been chaotic and at times contradictory. At root, the issue
is that “strategic competition” is a declaration of doctrinal attitude, not a
comprehensive strategy that has been put into practice.
The
uncomfortable truth is that China has long had an integrated internal strategy
for handling the United States, and so far its strategy has largely worked. By
contrast, the United States, which once articulated and then operationalized a
clear, unified strategy to deal with the challenge of the Soviet Union, in the
form of George Kennan’s strategy of containment, so far has none in relation to
China. This has been a dereliction of national responsibility.
Washington’s
difficulty in developing an effective China strategy lies in the absence of a
clearly understood strategic objective. At present, objectives articulated by
various officials range from inducing Chinese economic reform through a limited
trade war to full-blown regime change that focuses on overthrowing the
Communist Party. So what should this objective be—and what understanding of
China is it based on?
China has long had a strategy for handling
the U.S., and so far its strategy has largely worked.
America’s
Soviet strategy was built on Kennan’s famous 1946 “Long Telegram” from Moscow,
primarily an analysis of the inherent structural weaknesses within the Soviet
model itself, anchored by the analytical conclusion that the USSR would
ultimately collapse under the weight of its own contradictions. The entire
doctrine of containment—and its eventual success—was based on this critical
underlying assumption. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP), however, has been
much more dexterous in survival than its Soviet counterpart, aided by the fact
that China has studied carefully, over more than a decade, “what went wrong” in
the Soviet Union. It would therefore be extremely hazardous for U.S.
strategists to accept that an effective future U.S. China strategy should rest
solely on an assumption that the Chinese system is destined to inevitably
collapse from within—much less to make the “overthrow of the Communist Party”
the nation’s declared objective. The present challenge will require a
qualitatively different and more granular policy response to China than the
blunt instrument of “containment with Chinese characteristics” and a dream of
CCP collapse. In fact, indulgence in politically appealing calls for the
overthrow of the 91 million-member CCP as a whole is strategically
self-defeating. Such an approach only strengthens Xi’s hand as it enables him
to circle elite political and popular nationalist wagons in defense of both
party and country.
By contrast, a
strategy that focuses more narrowly on Xi, rather than the CCP as a whole,
presents a more achievable objective—and also points to policies that serve to
weaken rather than embolden his autocratic leadership in the process.
The Divisions Within
The wisdom in
Kennan’s analysis was his profound appraisal of how the Soviet Union functioned
internally and the development of a U.S. strategy that worked along the grain
of that complex reality. The same needs to be done with China. The political
reality is that the CCP is significantly divided on Xi’s leadership and his
vast ambitions. Senior party members have been greatly troubled by Xi’s policy
direction and angered by his endless demands for absolute loyalty. They fear
for their own lives and the future livelihoods of their families. There are
countless examples that point to this deep and abiding skepticism towards Xi.
Of particular importance in this mix are the reports unearthed by international
media of the wealth amassed by Xi’s family and members of his political inner
circle, despite the vigor with which Xi has conducted the anti-corruption
campaign. It is simply unsophisticated strategy to treat the entire Communist
Party as a single monolithic target when such internal fault lines should be
clear to the analyst’s eye—and in the intelligent policy maker’s pen.
Any strategy
that focuses on the party rather than on Xi himself also ignores the fact that
China, under all five of its post-Mao leaders prior to Xi, was able to work
with the United States. Under them, China aimed to join the existing
international order, not to remake it in China’s own image. That suggests the
mission for America’s China strategy should be to see China return to its
pre-2013 path—i.e., the pre-Xi strategic status quo. There were, of course,
many challenges to U.S. interests during Hu Jintao’s second term, but they were
manageable and did not represent a fundamental violation of the liberal
international order.
Of all the
elements commonly missing from discussions of U..S strategy toward China so
far, this sharper focus on the internal fault lines within the Chinese
leadership is the most critical. While U.S. leaders often differentiate between
China’s Communist Party government and the Chinese people, Washington must
achieve the sophistication necessary to go even further, differentiating
between the government and the party elite, as well as between the party elite
in general and Xi Jinping personally. This becomes increasingly important as
more moderate potential successors to Xi being to emerge.
It is unsophisticated strategy to treat the
entire Communist Party as a single monolithic target.
Given the
reality that today’s China is a state in which Xi has centralized nearly all
decision-making power in his own hands and used that power to substantially
alter China’s political, economic and foreign-policy trajectory, U.S. strategy
must remain laser-focused on Xi, his inner circle and the Chinese political
context in which they rule. Changing their decision-making will require
understanding, operating within the framework of their internal political
realities and changing overtime their political and strategic calculus. All
U.S. policy aimed at altering China’s behavior should revolve around this fact,
or it is likely to prove ineffectual.
This strategy
must also be long term—able to function at the timescale that a Chinese leader
like Xi sees himself ruling and influencing China’s central political
apparatus. And U.S. politics must be fully operationalized to put this strategy
into effect, transcending the rhetorical buzzwords that have too often
substituted for genuine U.S. vision when it comes to Beijing. Defending our
democracies from the challenge posed by China will require no less.
Mapping Xi’s Priorities—And Defining
America’s Own
To implement
such a strategy, Washington first needs a firm understanding of Xi’s strategic
objectives. The following list is based on a long observation of Chinese
political language and its policy actions—as well as an objective assessment of
where he has concentrated Chinese resources. These are dominated by:
• Keeping the
party in power at all costs.
• Maintaining national territorial
integrity.
• Growing the
national economy fast enough to break out of the middle-income trap.
• Achieving
military preponderance sufficient to deter the United States and its allies
from intervention in any conflict over Taiwan, the South China Sea or the East
China Sea.
• Diminishing
the credibility of U.S. power and influence sufficiently to cause those states
currently inclined to “balance” against China to instead join the bandwagon
with China.
• Deepening
and sustaining China’s relationship with Russia, its neighbor and most valuable
strategic partner, in order to head off Western pressure.
• Leapfrogging
the U.S. as a technological power and thereby displacing it as the world’s
dominant economic power.
• Undermining
U.S. dominance of the global financial system and the status of the U.S. dollar
as the global reserve currency.
• Consolidating
the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), turning China’s massive pan-continental
physical and digital infrastructure initiative into a geopolitical bloc aligned
with China’s policy ambitions, forming the foundation for a future Sino-centric
global order.
• Using
China’s growing influence within international institutions to delegitimize and
overturn initiatives, standards and norms perceived as hostile to China’s
interests—particularly on human rights and international maritime law—while
advancing a new, more authoritarian international order under Xi’s deliberately
amorphous concept of a “community of common destiny for all mankind.”
The Chinese
Communist Party keenly understands Sun Tzu’s maxim that “what is of supreme
importance in war is to attack the enemy's strategy,” and the U.S. should as
well. Any U.S. approach must seek to frustrate Xi’s ambitions.
That means
first clarifying which U.S. national interests are to be protected, together
with those of principal partners and allies. This includes maintaining
overwhelming conventional military deterrence and preventing any unacceptable
shift in the strategic nuclear balance; preventing any Chinese territorial
expansion, especially the forcible reunification with Taiwan; consolidating and
expanding alliances and partnerships; retaining collective economic and
technological superiority; protecting the global status of the U.S. dollar;
defending (and as necessary reforming) the current rules-based liberal
international order and, critically, its ideological underpinnings, including
core democratic values; and the prevention of catastrophic climate change.
This list,
like China’s, is long—and given China’s significant and growing “comprehensive
national power,” some may question how securing such a wide range of core
national objectives can realistically be achieved. It might be helpful to keep
in mind one overriding political objective: To cause China’s elite leadership
to conclude that it is in the country’s best interests to operate as a
status-quo power again. This means that the party needs to see a clearer route
to success by staying within the existing US-led liberal international order
than by building a rival order; and it should clearly be in the party’s best
interests, if it wishes to remain in power at home, not to attempt to expand
China’s borders or export its political model beyond China’s shores. In other
words, China can become a different type of global great power than that
envisaged by Xi.
The primary
way in which the United States can achieve these ends, while also protecting
its own core advantages, is to change China’s objectives and behavior. In developing
an effective U.S. China strategy, Washington should bear in mind the following
organizing principles.
A successful
U.S. strategy must be based on its existing strengths, which means the four
fundamental pillars of American power: the power of the nation’s military; the
status of the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency and mainstay of the
international financial system; global technological leadership, given that
technology has become the major determinant of future national power; and the
values of individual freedom, fairness and the rule of law for which the nation
continues to stand, despite its recent political divisions and difficulties.
The defense of universal liberal values
and the international order, as well as U.S. global power, must be the twin
pillars of America’s global call to arms.
This last
point is important. Any effective U.S. China strategy will be anchored in both
national values and national interests. This is what has long distinguished the
nation from China in the eyes of the world. The defense of universal liberal
values and the liberal international order, as well as the maintenance of U.S.
global power, must be the twin pillars of America’s global call to arms.
U.S. strategy
must also be fully coordinated with major allies. This has nothing to do with
making allies feel good; it’s because the United States now needs them to win.
China watches alliances closely, and places great weight on its calculation of
the evolving balance of comprehensive power between the United States and
itself. The reality is that, as the gap between Chinese and U.S. power closes
during the 2020s, the most credible factor that can alter that trajectory is if
U.S. power is augmented by that of its principal allies.
This means,
realistically, that the U.S. must act on the wider political and economic needs
of its principal allies and partners rather than assuming that they will choose
to adopt a common, coordinated strategic position on China out of the goodness
of their hearts. Unless the United States also deals with the fact that China
has become the principal trading partner for most, if not all, of its major
allies, this underlying economic reality alone will have growing influence over
the willingness of traditional allies to challenge China’s increasingly
assertive international behavior.
Washington
must also rebalance its relationship with Russia, whether it likes it or not.
Effectively reinforcing U.S. alliances is critical. Dividing Russia from China
in the future is equally so. Allowing Russia to drift fully into China’s
strategic embrace over the last decade will go down as the single greatest
geostrategic error of successive U.S. administrations.
The Biden
Administration must never forget the innately realist nature of the Chinese
strategy that it is seeking to defeat. Chinese leaders respect strength and are
contemptuous of weakness. They respect consistency and are contemptuous of
vacillation. China does not believe in strategic vacuums.
The White
House must understand that China remains for the time being highly anxious
about military conflict with the United States, but that this attitude will
change as the military balance shifts over the next decade. If military
conflict were to erupt between China and the United States, and China failed to
win decisively, then—given the party’s domestic propaganda offensive over many
years proclaiming China’s inevitable rise—Xi would probably fall and the
regime’s overall political legitimacy would collapse.
America also
needs to attend to the home front, particularly domestic economic and
institutional weaknesses. The success of China’s rise has been predicated on a
meticulous strategy, executed over thirty-five years, of identifying and
addressing China’s structural economic weaknesses in manufacturing, trade,
finance, human capital and now technology. The U.S. must now do the same.
Finally, for Xi,
too, “It’s the economy, stupid.” Short of defeat in any future military action,
the single greatest factor that could contribute to Xi’s fall is economic
failure. That would mean large-scale unemployment and falling living standards
for China’s population. Full employment and rising living standards are the
essential components of the unspoken social contract between the Chinese people
and the CCP since the tumult of the Cultural Revolution.
Based on these
organizing principles, a detailed, operationalized strategy should comprise
seven integrated components:
• Rebuild the
economic, military, technological and human-capital underpinnings of U.S.
long-term national power.
• Agree on a
limited set of enforceable policy “red lines” that China should be deterred
from crossing under any circumstances.
• Agree on a
larger number of “major national security interests” which are neither vital
nor existential in nature but which require a range of retaliatory actions to
inform future Chinese strategic behavior.
• Identify
important but less critical areas where neither red lines nor the delineation
of major national interests may be necessary, but where the full force of
strategic competition should be deployed by the United States against China.
• Define those
areas where continued strategic cooperation with China remains in U.S.
interests—particularly “megathreats” such as climate disruption, global
pandemics and nuclear security.
• Prosecute a
full-fledged, global ideological battle in defense of political, economic and
societal freedoms against China’s authoritarian state-capitalist model.
• Agree on the
above strategy in sufficiently granular form with America’s major Asian and
European treaty allies so that their combined critical mass (economic, military
and technological) is deployed in common defense of the U.S.-led liberal
international order.
These seven
components should be implemented through a fully coordinated interagency and
interallied effort, under the central direction of the national security
advisor, underpinned by a presidential directive with the bipartisan political
support to endure across multiple administrations.
Red Lines and National Security
The idea of
“red lines” can be a lightning rod in foreign policy. They have great value in
setting the boundaries of acceptable national behavior, but defined too broadly
or ignored, they turn into symbols of inaction rather than deterrence. The
United States’ list of red lines should be short, focused and enforceable.
China’s tactic
for many years has been to blur the red lines that might otherwise lead to open
confrontation with the United States too early for Beijing’s liking. The United
States must be very clear about which Chinese actions it will seek to deter
and, should deterrence fail, will prompt direct American intervention. These
should be unambiguously communicated to Beijing through high-level diplomatic
channels so that China is placed on notice.
They should include
any nuclear, chemical or biological weapons action by China against the United
States or its allies, or use by North Korea that China has allowed to happen
through lack of decisive action; any Chinese military attack against Taiwan or
its offshore islands, including an economic blockade or major cyberattack on
public infrastructure and institutions; any Chinese attack against Japanese
forces in their defense of Japanese sovereignty over the Senkaku Islands and
their surrounding exclusive economic zone in the East China Sea; any major
Chinese hostile action in the South China Sea, including to further reclaim and
militarize islands, or to prevent full freedom of navigation operations by the
United States and allied maritime forces; and any Chinese attack against the
sovereign territory or military assets of America’s treaty allies.
There is a
further category of major national security concerns for the United States
which will also warrant an American response, but not necessarily of a military
nature. These are national security interests of a non-vital, but nonetheless
highly significant nature. There are multiple tools in the American tool kit
that can be deployed for these purposes that will not only send a message to
the senior echelons of the Chinese leadership that a line has been crossed, but
also administer real and measurable pain. Once again, these should be
communicated in advance through high level private diplomacy. This list should
include:
• Continued
refusal by China, within a defined time frame, to participate in substantive
bilateral or multilateral strategic nuclear arms reduction talks, with the
object of securing a cap on China’s program of nuclear modernization and
expansion.
• Any action
by China that threatens the security of U.S. space assets or global
communications systems.
• Any major
Chinese cyberattack against any U.S. or allied governments’ critical economic,
social or political infrastructure.
• Any act of
large-scale military or economic belligerence against America’s treaty allies
or other critical strategic partners, including India.
• Any act of
genocide or crimes against humanity against any group within China.
Defining America’s Areas of Strategic
Competition—and Cooperation
Enforcing
clear boundaries on security issues needs to be one part of the U.S. China
strategy, but a fully calibrated strategy also allows for a wider form of
strategic competition. This takes place in the diplomatic and economic domains
in which the two countries have clearly conflicting policy agendas, but where
their conflicts can be resolved by means that don’t involve the threat of force
or other punitive measures. While the interests at stake here are important,
they are neither existential nor critical in nature.
The common
characteristic for all of these areas of strategic competition must be
confidence that the United States can and will prevail, with America’s
underlying strengths and values still providing the stronger hand to play in
what remains an open, competitive, international environment.
These areas of
strategic competition against China should include sustaining current U.S.
force levels in the Indo-Pacific region (because to do otherwise would cause
China to conclude that the United States has begun to retreat from its alliance
commitments), while also modernizing military doctrine, platforms and
capabilities to ensure robust region wide deterrence. Also on this list:
stabilizing relations with Russia and encouraging the same between Russia and
Japan; concluding a fully operationalized Quadrilateral Security Dialogue with
India, Japan and Australia by inducing India to abandon its final political and
strategic reservations against such an arrangement; and facilitating the
normalization of Japan-South Korea relations to prevent Korea from continuing
to drift strategically in China’s direction.
In the
economic domain, strategic competition would necessitate America protecting the
global reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar; protecting critical new
technologies, both U.S. and allied, from Chinese acquisition; integrating, to
the greatest extent possible, the U.S., Canadian and Mexican economies into a
seamless market of five-hundred million in order to underpin long-term economic
strength relative to China; and renegotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership
trade agreement. Other areas include negotiating a transatlantic trade and
investment partnership with the European Union and acceding to it, along with
other potential agreements on technology or other issues; prioritizing trade,
investment and aid between the United States and each of the Southeast Asian
states, particularly with U.S. allies Thailand and the Philippines, to prevent
further strategic drift by Southeast Asia toward China; and enforcing China’s pledges
on trade and investment liberalization in partnership with friends and allies,
through a reformed multilateral trade dispute-resolution mechanism.
Strategic
competition would also include investing at scale, alongside U.S. allies, in
the World Bank and the regional development banks, so emerging economies can
fund their national infrastructure without resorting to China’s Belt and Road
Initiative. It involves revitalizing the UN and other multilateral and
international institutions as the cornerstones of global political governance;
rebuilding the U.S. State Department itself, including its operational budgets
and staffing levels, to be able to diplomatically compete with China globally;
increasing U.S. overseas development aid through the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) and established UN humanitarian agencies in
order to, together with U.S. allies, sustain donor dominance over China through
coordinated global aid delivery; and strengthening multilateral human rights
institutional arrangements to maintain multilateral pressure on both China’s
domestic human rights practices as well as the Communist Party’s international
political legitimacy.
As for the
areas of strategic cooperation: There is a further set of policy challenges
where it is in the U.S. interest, together with those of its allies, to
continue to engage in bilateral or multilateral strategic cooperation with
China. This is not to make Americans feel better, or to be nice to the Chinese
government. It is because in these areas U.S. interests are best advanced by
working with Beijing rather than against it. Under current circumstances, areas
for strategic cooperation with China would include negotiating a nuclear arms
control agreement to bring China within the global arms control regime for the
first time and to prevent a new nuclear arms race; collaborating on the actual
denuclearization of North Korea; negotiating bilateral agreements on
cyberwarfare and cyberespionage; negotiating bilateral agreements on the
peaceful use of space; and negotiating protocols on future limitations on
AI-controlled autonomous weapons systems.
It should also
embrace cooperation on global macroeconomic and financial stability to prevent
future global crises and recessions, including through the G20; work to address
climate change through the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, as well
as bilaterally and trilaterally with countries like India, the world’s
third-largest emitter; a global research project on breakthrough climate
technologies including long-term solar-energy storage, as part of a global
research consortium; cooperating on future AI-based medical and pharmaceutical
research to develop new responses to major disease categories affecting both
countries including cancer; and cooperating on the development of effective
future global pandemic notification and management, as well as vaccine
development and distribution.
Conclusion
Ideas still
matter in politics and international relations. Prevailing over the long term
against a rival like China is not just a question of the balance of power,
critical though that is. How a people think about themselves, the types of
societies being built, the economies under development and the polities that
evolve to resolve differences, all profoundly shape worldviews.
This contest of
ideas will continue. Xi has already thrown down the ideological gauntlet to the
United States and the West with his authoritarian capitalist model. The
challenge for North Americans, Europeans and other liberal democracies who
believe in open economies, just societies and competitive political systems, is
to have continuing confidence in the inherent efficacy of the ideas upon which
they rest.
This strategy
must be implemented nationally, bilaterally, regionally, multilaterally and
globally. Thinking and acting on that scale has been China’s approach for
decades. Again, this is where allies are no longer optional but crucial, given
that they can often achieve what the United States cannot, whether in
particular countries, regions or institutions. The United States should always
bear in mind that China has no real allies other than North Korea, Pakistan and
Russia—placing Beijing at a considerable strategic disadvantage globally
relative to the United States. Allies are a great advantage.
Such an
approach will require an unprecedented level of U.S. national and international
policy coordination. It will require the rebuilding of the U.S. Foreign Service
and USAID. It will require the complete integration of the efforts of the
Departments of State, Defense, Treasury and Commerce, the Office of the U.S.
Trade Representative, USAID and the intelligence community. This will mean that
future national security advisors (augmented with the best high-level support
staff) will need to be individually responsible for full coordination and final
execution of the United States’ long-term China strategy.
There is no
reason to believe it impossible, if such a strategy is successfully followed,
that Xi will in time be replaced by the more traditional form of Communist Party
leadership. Xi, as noted previously, is already provoking significant reactions
against himself and his current strategic course. Over the longer term the
Chinese people themselves may well come to question and challenge the party’s
century-long proposition that China’s ancient civilization is forever destined
to an authoritarian future. The latter, however, is ultimately a matter for the
Chinese people themselves, rather than U.S. strategy. Instead, the ambition of
U.S. strategy for the decades ahead should be to cause China’s Communist Party
leadership to change strategic course—with or without Xi Jinping at the helm.
In the final
analysis, the major problem facing the United States in confronting Xi’s China
is not one of military, economic, or technological capabilities. It is one of
self-belief. There is a subtle yet corrosive force that has been at work in the
United States’ national psychology for some time now, raising doubt about the
nation’s future and encouraging a sense that, as a country, America’s best days
may now be in the past. Adversaries sense this as well.
Objectively, there is no basis for any such despair. The United States, as a country, is young, and the capacity for innovation is unsurpassed. The values for which it stands have stood the test of time. This is where the nation’s leadership must once again step up to the challenge—not just to provide the nation with vision, mission and purpose; not just to frame the strategy and give it effect; but to cause the American people to once again believe in the nation and its capacity to provide effective global leadership for the century ahead. In doing so, the nation must also lead its friends and allies to once again believe in the United States as well.