Racing to Multipolarity
The myopic focus on weakening Russia has had the
unintended consequence of strengthening China.
Mar 27, 2023
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/racing-to-multipolarity/
In a quest to maintain its hegemony in a unipolar
world, American foreign policy strategy has
sought to weaken a Russia that it sees as an “acute threat” and to confront and
contain a China that it sees as “the most comprehensive and serious challenge
to U.S. national security.”
The immediate challenge is Russia, the theory goes,
but the long-term challenge is China. It is not strategically optimal to fight
both superpowers at once. Russia has to be weakened so China can be confronted
in its challenge to the U.S.-led unipolar world.
The attempt to weaken Russia in the war in Ukraine,
though, may be having the ironic effect of strengthening China’s role in an
emerging multipolar world.
An unprecedented sanctions regime was intended to
punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine and to prevent it from executing that
invasion. It has not only failed to accomplish that goal; it also has had the
unintended consequence of pushing Russia closer to China. Sealing Russia off
from western markets forced Russia to look east to China, India, the Eurasian
community, and a global community of sanctioned nations. So the sanctions
regime has in fact hastened the advent of multipolarity, as well as
strengthened China’s position abroad.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President
Vladimir Putin are “in constant
communication.” And on March 20, Xi arrived in
Russia for talks that are aimed, in part, to
“reaffirm the special nature of the Russia-China partnership.”
On December 13, Xi promised that
China "will work with Russia to extend strong mutual support on issues
concerning each other’s core interests, and deepen practical cooperation in
trade, agriculture, connectivity and other areas.” A week later, Xi said that
China is "ready to build up strategic cooperation with Russia, providing
each other with development opportunities and remaining global partners for the
benefit of our countries..." The Chinese Foreign Ministry said that “Any
attempt to stop China and Russia from marching forward is doomed to fail"
and that "China and Russia will deepen exchanges at all levels, and
promote China-Russia relations and cooperation in all areas to a higher
level..."
Russian-Chinese trade has increased dramatically. In
his recent address to the Federal Assembly, Putin said that
“the Russian economy has embarked on a new growth cycle. Experts believe that
it will rely on a fundamentally new model and structure. New, promising global
markets, including the Asia-Pacific, are taking precedence...” He promised that
Russia “will expand promising foreign economic ties and build new logistics
corridors. ... This will, in part, allow us to considerably expand our ties
with Southeast Asian markets.”
The sanctions on Russia have had the unintended
consequence of more firmly coupling Russia and China, a geopolitical shift away
from unipolarity.
The American insistence on a world of blocs in which
countries must choose sides—and face consequences if they do not align with the
U.S. and sanction Russia—has not resonated well in most of the world. Large
countries such as India, Brazil, and South Africa have refused to sanction
Russia, preferring to align with China and its multipolar vision. India has
maintained its regional concerns against China but has refused to join the
American global rivalry with China; it has been a U.S. partner but has
maintained its very close partnership with Russia. India has insisted on
abstaining in U.N. votes and refused to sanction Russia; in fact, it has
increased its trade with Russia.
While large countries like India maintain preferences
for China’s multipolar world over America’s unipolar world, smaller countries
have also reasserted their right to neutrality and rejected the U.S. unipolar
vision. They have refused to join sanctions or to take sides, asserting a right
to choose their own national interests. Like India, Saudi Arabia has said that
“we do not believe in polarization or in choosing between sides.”
It is hard for Latin America, the Middle East, and
Africa to hear the Manichean message of good and evil and democracy versus
autocracy. They have memories, and the U.S. criticism of Russia’s violation of
state sovereignty and of territorial borders smells of hypocrisy. They remember
their democracies being replaced by autocracies in U.S.-backed coups. They too
tend more toward China’s message of multipolarity. They want to benefit from
the Belt and Road Initiative and from China’s economic growth without having to
pick a side or face consequences. They too listen with greater interest to
China’s investment proposals that do not require ideological alignment or
economic or political structural adjustments.
American attempts to coerce countries into opposing
and sanctioning Russia have moved them instead into a position of reasserting
nonalignment and shaping a world that resonates with China’s multipolar
worldview and strengthens China’s economic and diplomatic role in that
multipolar world.
While the world has been focused on the U.S. as the
power that will decide whether they will block or encourage negotiations
to end the war, an unforeseen alternative has emerged. What if China played the
role of superpower broker, and Ukraine and Russia signed an agreement,
bypassing U.S. involvement?
On February 24, China published its
“Position on the Political Settlement of the Ukraine Crisis.” It is not yet a
fully developed settlement proposal, but rather a declaration of China’s
position and a pledge that China is willing to assume “a constructive role in
this regard.”
The emergence of China on the diplomatic front is a
hint at the potential of a multipolarity. It could be China, not the U.S., that
rises to the role of broker of a diplomatic settlement, sidelining the U.S. and
allowing China to shape the postwar world.
This potential was demonstrated on March 10 when China
brokered a transformative agreement between rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia
without American involvement.
China’s published position explicitly stipulates
multipolarity. After insisting on the strict observance of international law
and respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries,
point one of the position paper declares that “all countries, big or small,
strong or weak, rich or poor, are equal members of the international
community.” That is the negation of a unipolar world and the very definition of
a multipolar world.
The second point is “abandoning the Cold War
mentality.” This point reflects Russia’s long demand for an “effective and
sustainable European security architecture” that transcends “bloc
confrontation” and treats Russia as an equal power in a transatlantic security
architecture in which it is not a subordinate nation but an equal in a
multipolar world.
This second point challenges America’s unipolar right
to expand NATO and enforce U.S. hegemony: “The security of a region should not
be achieved by strengthening or expanding military blocs." It insists that
“the security of a country should not be pursued at the expense of others” and
that “all parties should oppose the pursuit of one's own security at the cost
of others' security....”
Russia has long countered the U.S. citation of the
international principle that states have the free and sovereign right to choose
their own security alignments with the citation of the equally binding
principle of the indivisibility of security. This principle says that the
security of one state should not be purchased at the expense of the security of
another, as Richard Sakwa, professor of Russian and European Politics at the
University of Kent, has pointed out.
The U.S. has insisted on the first as a defense of
NATO’s open door policy for Ukraine and the eastward expansion of its hegemony.
Russia has insisted that NATO expansion to its very borders threatens its core
security interests. In a conversation with Biden on December 7, 2021, Putin
said that "every country is entitled to choose the most acceptable way to
ensure its security, but this should be done so as not to encroach on the
interests of other parties and not undermine the security of other
countries.... We believe that ensuring security must be global and cover
everyone equally." Russia has even pointed out that NATO’s own principles
resolve not to “threaten the legitimate interests” of other states.
China’s position challenges the U.S. expanding its
hegemony by increasing the scope of its bloc and tipping the balance in further
favor of a U.S.-led unipolar world.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has strengthened the
transatlantic community. The U.S. and the European members of NATO have been
united in their sanctions of Russia and their supply of weapons to Ukraine.
But there have been schisms and challenges.
Biden promised that
“if Russia invades... there will be no longer a Nord Stream 2. We will bring an
end to it”; Victoria Nuland’s assured that
“if Russia invades Ukraine, one way or another Nord Stream 2 will not move
forward”; and Antony Blinken celebrated the
sabotage as a “tremendous opportunity.” These statements combine with admissions
from American officials that the deed was
carried out by a “pro-Ukrainian group” to suggest that it took a historic act
of sabotage, an act of war, to keep Germany fully on board in America’s
sanction regime. It took cutting Germany and Europe off from their crucial
Russian fuel supply by blowing up the Nord Stream pipeline.
If China becomes more involved in the war in Ukraine,
either by asserting itself as a diplomatic power or by aiding Russia with nonlethal aid or,
for that matter, weapons,
the U.S., which is already insisting on shrinking economic cooperation with
China, could demand more from its European partners.
The difficulty of persuading Germany to uncouple from
China, especially when it has already been cut off from Russia, was illustrated
by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s November trip to Beijing. Scholz defied the
U.S. and NATO by becoming the first G7 leader to go to Beijing to meet with
President Xi Jinping, who has supported Putin throughout the war. Scholz was
accompanied on his trip by top German
business leaders, including the CEOs of Volkswagen, BMW, BASF, Bayer and
Deutsche Bank.
China is Germany’s most important trading partner.
Since the Russian invasion of China, Germany’s has increased its
investments in and economic dependence on China. It will be more difficult to
pressure Germany to cut its Chinese economic ties than its Russian ones. It is
asking a lot of Germany to tell it to cut ties with both.
A growing role for China in the current conflict could
force a scenario in which the unipolar world is challenged by asking Germany
and Europe to side with the U.S. and banish China. There is the hazardous
potential of a decision that could divide the U.S.-led unipolar world and
strengthen a new multipolar reality.
The attempt to weaken Russia in the war in Ukraine may
have had the unintended consequence of strengthening China in a multipolar
world that weakening Russia was intended to prevent.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ted Snider
Ted Snider is a columnist on U.S. foreign
policy and history at Antiwar.com. He is also a frequent contributor to
Responsible Statecraft as well as other outlets.
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