OCTOBER 18, 2016
counterpunch.org
So you think Donald Trump is the
biggest threat to world peace? And Barack Obama engineered America’s “pivot to
Asia”?
It was
actually Hillary Clinton, emphasising the necessity of a “strategic turn” for
the United States, who launched the pivot to Asia in an October 2011 article
titled “America’s Pacific Century”. The tone was martial: “Our military is by
far the strongest and our economy is by far the largest.” The South China Sea
duly featured: “Half the world’s merchant tonnage flows through this water”.
Informed observers didn’t need a manual to spot Clinton’s subtle cue alerting
them to the danger of China’s “nine-dashed line”.
Clinton’s
essay preceded Obama’s November 2011 speech to the Australian Parliament in
which he officially announced the pivot. The key theme was the US as a “Pacific
nation”. The tone was mostly combative. Only after 10 long confrontational paragraphs
did a meek “effort to build a cooperative relationship with China” appear.
As a
presidential candidate in 2008, Clinton’s tone was way more composed. She
admitted that the US budget deficit was largely funded by Chinese purchases of
US Treasury bills. She then seemed to be subscribing to the widely held notion
in the Beltway that the root of US global hegemony is economic.
Five years
later, Clinton had substantially changed her mind to write her pivot essay. The
source was none other than the intellectual/conceptual author of the pivot:
Kurt Campbell, then US assistant secretary of state for Asia.
Campbell is
classic revolving door material – Marshall scholar at Oxford, active duty in
the navy, a job at the Pentagon under Bill Clinton, and at the State Department
in the first Obama term under Hillary. It took him a full two years to “win”
the bureaucracy/intellectual battle inside Foggy Bottom that resulted in
Hillary Clinton’s essay and Obama’s speech.
From the
beginning, the pivot’s focus was of course China – an attempt to reach a
delicate balance between economic partners/strategic rivals. Obama may have
been progressively swinging towards “rival”. But, already in mid-2010, the
decision had actually been Clinton’s. In a conference in Hanoi, she announced
that the US had a “national interest” in “respect for international law in the
South China Sea”.
That was the
crucial moment when the evolving US-China showdown in the South China Sea
actually began – framing the whole subsequent pivot as a provocative,
over-militarised gambit liable to spin out of control.
Kurt
Campbell is now the CEO of an Asia-centred advisory group. He’s also associated
with the Washington think tank Centre for a New American Security (CNAS), a
neocon-neoliberalcon mix. It’s CNAS that came up with the geopolitical road map
to be adopted by a future President Clinton. Key signatories include Campbell,
the godfather of the neocons Robert Kagan, and Michele Flournoy, formerly with
the Pentagon and a co-founder of CNAS.
“Extending
American Power: Strategies to Expand US Engagement in a Competitive World
Order”, as the report is titled, predictably peddles Exceptionalism. It extols
“freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea – which is code for the US navy
forever controlling the sea lanes straddling China’s supply chain. It calls for
a no-fly zone in Syria – which would pit the US air force against the Russian
air force. And it’s a sucker for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) – the
China-excluding, Nato-on-trade-style arm of the pivot.
Clinton, the
real pivot champion, was of course a huge supporter of the TPP from the start.
But during the presidential campaign, she flip-flopped. If elected, there’s no
question the TPP will be promoted no holds barred.
Clinton’s
CNAS road map made a surreptitious appearance during the first, contentious
presidential debate, when she aligned no less than three of the Pentagon/US
Strategic Command’s five existential “threats” to the US in the same breath.
While
discussing cyberattacks on the US, Clinton managed to expand in one sweep from
cyberspace to Full Spectrum Dominance – the official Pentagon doctrine since
2002.
“Whether
it’s Russia, China, Iran, or anybody else, the United States has much greater
capacity. And we are not going to sit idly by and permit state actors to go
after our information, our private sector information or our public sector
information,” she said.
The message
was clear; the Pentagon is closely watching – in every domain – these three
“existential threats” who happen to be the key powers closely involved in
Eurasian integration: Russia, China and Iran.
The “Full
Spectrum Dominance” doctrine also implies nuclear pre-eminence. The guarantee
of a US first nuclear strike – arguably against one of those top Pentagon existential
“threats” – is a crucial vector of this doctrine, to which the pivot to Asia is
subordinated. No wonder pivot champion Clinton, during the first debate, could
not reject the doctrine.
And yet
Trump, in one short sentence, actually may have ruled out World War III if he
becomes president. He said: “I would certainly not do first-strike”.
The CNAS
report is essentially a diluted version of the Pentagon’s Full Spectrum
Dominance. China, as well as Russia and Iran, are essentially seen as hostile
powers bent on Eurasian integration – standing between America’s “Pacific
Century” and an irreversible, tumultuous decline. This is a bipartisan,
neocon/neoliberalcon feeling in Washington. And pivoting, nuclear first-strike
Clinton is their Great White Hope.
Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the
Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books,
2007), Red Zone Blues: a
snapshot of Baghdad during the surge and Obama does
Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009). His latest book is Empire of Chaos. He
may be reached at pepeasia@yahoo.com.
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