Alphen, Netherlands. 25
March. At the start of his historic
visit to Russia last week newly-installed Chinese President Xi Jingping said
that the “two countries spoke a common language”. If America sees itself as the indispensable
global pivot China clearly has the ambition to become the other global pivot in
a new bipolar order. Xi’s visit to
Moscow last week, just over forty years on from Henry Kissinger’s famous 1971
visit to Beijing, makes it is clear that China is embarked on a grand strategy to balance America
on the world stage. This will be a tumultuous
twenty-first century.
Kissinger’s 1971 visit
to China was set against the backdrop of a Nixon administration desperate to
extract itself from a failing Vietnam War.
Henry Kissinger, the grand architect of Cold War Realpolitik, wanted to
force the Soviet Union to look both east and west. Moscow was already at the time embroiled in a
full-scale border war with China, its supposedly Communist partner. In a sense by forcing the Soviet Union to
face the prospect of a ‘zweifrontenskrieg’ (two-front war) Kissinger applied
lessons from his native Germany’s history to US grand strategy
Cue Xi. The aim of Chinese grand strategy is
certainly not to trigger a war with the Americans. However, Chinese strategic logic is still
embedded in Sun Tzu; force an opponent to confront so many options over such
time and distance that to all intents and purposes they render themselves weak
by uncertainty. And, Xi clearly understands
Kissinger’s dictum that “no country can act wisely in every part of the globe
at every moment of time”.
Xi’s timing is
impeccable. There are of course
perfectly legitimate reasons for close Chinese-Russian relations. They are partners in the Shanghai
Co-operation Organisation. China is the
world’s biggest energy consumer whilst Russia is the biggest energy
provider. Trade between the two
countries is booming and is now worth some $88bn or €68bn per annum.
However, Xi’s visit and
indeed his vision is grand strategic and must be seen as such. China intends to
lead the strategic counter-balance to the American not-so-well led West and to
that end will forge relationships that exploit American uncertainty and Europe’s
precipitous decline.
Kissinger famously said
that “If you don’t know where you are going, every road will get you nowhere”. As Xi was speaking to Russian President Putin
I was attending a conference in The Hague organised by the excellent Atlantic
Commission on the transatlantic partnership.
Set against Xi’s visit to Moscow the extent to which Europe’s political class
has completely lost the strategic plot was all too evident. As Xi talked about a new anti-democracy global
balance of power pact with Putin all my fellow Europeans could worry about was
Cyprus and trying to blame America and Britain for causing the Eurozone crisis.
Not only is that laughably wrong it completely and dangerously misses Xi’s
point.
And there is a
link. The Russian media has been running
stories all week about the EU’s attempts to resolve the Cyprus crisis as being anti-Russian. Given that the deal struck over the weekend
will possibly see a levy of up to 20% on depositor’s accounts worth €100,000
and more the deal will indeed have a real impact on Russian depositors. Now, much of that money is of very dubious
provenance and it is clear that Germany in particular wants to stop Cyprus being
used as an offshore bank haven within the Euro.
However, the timing could not have been worse and will simply help push
Russia towards a new anti-Western strategic partnership with China.
That dynamic will be
made all the more certain by the strategic denial that now afflicts the Euro-world. For example, the Chinese are clearly building
a blue-water navy and Xi’s comments demonstrate clear intent to use the Chinese
fleet as a platform for strategic influence. Do not worry, I was told by a senior NATO
official, because the Chinese do not know how to use such a fleet. Sorry NATO but should you not be thinking
about these developments?
Clearly, the West must not
fall into the trap of concluding that legitimate Chinese ambitions are a
precursor to conflict and somehow a new narrative is needed in the US-Chinese
strategic relationship (the only strategic relationship that now matters). Equally, neither Americans nor Europeans can
ignore Chinese intent as stated by Xi in Moscow or its burgeoning capability. In others words the transatlantic allies need
a China strategy.
Sadly that was not the
worst of it in The Hague. A
senior European said that in December the European Union will devote a WHOLE
session of the European Council meeting to defence.
Whoopee!
Kissinger said that “power
is the great aphrodisiac”. Perhaps he
should now add that weakness is the great sedative.
Xi’s Kissinger move –
it will not be his last.
Julian Lindley-French
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