Alphen,
Netherlands. 03 June. In James Hilton’s fictional 1937 novel “Lost
Horizons” Shangri-La is a heaven on earth, a happy island of peace, permanently isolated from the outside
world (no, not Britain). For the High
Lama (a sort of David Cameron) harmony, “...is the entire meaning and purpose
of Shangri-La. It came to me as a vision
long, long ago. I saw all the nations
strengthening, not in wisdom, but in the vulgar passions and the will to
destroy”. Reading US Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel’s 1 June speech on the “US Approach to Regional Security” at the
IISS 2013 Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, I am reminded of the High
Lama.
Viewed from Washington
much of Asia-Pacific is fast-tracking into an arms race fuelled by nationalist
tensions, competition over growth-fuelling resources and the ‘prestige’ muscle-flexing
favoured by all adolescent powers. Even
the shortest survey of Asia-Pacific’s strategic horizon reveals the dangers
that abound. China’s regional-strategic and
resource ambitions come up hard against Indian, Indonesian, Japanese, Malaysian,
Philippines and Vietnamese interests.
Some Chinese interpretations of its Exclusive Economic Zone have the
boundary bordering the territorial waters of Japan, Vietnam, Indonesia,
Malaysia and the Philippines. The recent
Chinese-Japanese spat over the Daioyu/Senkaku islands highlights the sensitivities
of an overly sensitized region. And then
there is North Korea.
In fact Hagel’s speech is for me
déja vu all over again. Indeed, I am
struck by the similarities between America’s stabilising mission in Asia-Pacific
in the first decades of the twenty first century and Britain’s similar mission in
the last decades of the nineteenth century.
Both America and Britain had passed the zenith of their global influence
but were by no means in decline. Both
faced the emergence of a peer competitor and both faced financial shocks at
home which undermined their respective capacities to project stabilising
influence world-wide.
One has only to read
the long shopping-list of security challenges Hagel outlines in his speech to
realise the challenge America faces. The
great panda in the room is of course China.
It is clearly up to China whether the US ‘re-balancing’ to Asia-Pacific turns
into a full-scale containment strategy. What
Hagel is offering is insurance. The US
will for the foreseeable future represent forty per cent of global defence
expenditure. In that light shifting
sixty per cent of US naval and air forces to Asia-Pacific makes perfect
strategic sense given that Asia not Europe is the world’s strategic epicentre. In any case, as a Washington friend said
to me some time ago, “we could sort out the Chinese military in an afternoon”. He should know; he was very, very high up in
the Pentagon. For how long?
The Hagel speech is
simply strategic common sense. It is
precisely that common sense that is missing in Europe. Indeed, it is Europe not America that is retreating
into a fictional Shangri-La. Even the
once sturdily imperial British have become so strategically myopic and short-termist
that they are about to make another defence cut to follow the ravaging of the
British armed forces that took place in 2010.
If the British have lost the strategic influence plot then the rest of
Europe has become a kind of strategic Rip Van Winkel (to mix my fictional
metaphors).
The danger is this;
America is still the world’s pre-dominant power but it is no longer the
dominant power. Equally, America’s global stabilising strategy only makes credible
sense if the European allies can look beyond the pit of their own self-induced despair
and develop a regional-strategic security strategy worthy of the name. That means Europeans collectively considering
in all seriousness their grand strategic role beyond cloudily pointless efforts
to create Shangri-La.
That means NATO.
NATO was not mentioned
by Hagel in his speech, although he did say that the, “rebalancing should not
be misinterpreted. The US has allies,
interests and responsibilities across the world. The Asia-Pacific rebalance is not a retreat
from other regions of the world”. Here I
beg to differ, Mr Secretary. If the
European allies continue to avoid the big world picture (as opposed to Planet
Europe) Asia-Pacific powers will progressively tip the balance of power away from
the West. Sooner or later an
over-stretched America will be forced to make the most profound of strategic
choices. This is just what Britain did
when it effectively abandoned its Asian empire to cope with the
growing challenge of Germany. NATO’s job is to keep America engaged in Europe by keeping America
strong in Asia-Pacific. Get it?
History is full of
ironies. The USS Freedom is sitting alongside the quay at the Singapore Naval
Base. It was not the Singaporeans that built
that base, but the nineteenth century British.
At some point one hundred years or so ago an HMS Freedom (or its equivalent) was doing exactly the same. Now, whatever happened to that empire?
Julian Lindley-French
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