G*********e 发帖数: 2091 | 1 Combatting Chinese Economic Coercion in the NSS
The Trump administration needs a robust plan to make sure America remains
the world’s most powerful economy.
4 HOURS AGO
CATEGORIES: ELEPHANTS IN THE ROOM
Michael Allen
Featured image
This coming Monday, President Donald Trump will release his National
Security Strategy (NSS), a quadrennial executive effort to transform
campaign promises into a coherent framework to govern national security
decision-making. Although these are usually general and rife with platitudes
, this year’s is especially important as the administration will highlight
a plan to address China’s growing economic assertiveness.
The Trump administration has many irons in the fire. Its inquiry into
Beijing’s joint venture requirements, equity ownership limitations, and
other efforts to force the transfer of intellectual property to China have
received broad support from the business community, despite some concerns of
Chinese retaliation leading to a trade war. There is also some support for
efforts to curb the dumping of aluminum and steel into the U.S. market.
Though the administration is pursuing these issues at the World Trade
Organization (WTO), these actions are largely geared toward increasing U.S.
leverage in bilateral economic negotiations with China.
But China’s economic strategy has broader national security implications
for the United States. President Xi Jinping’s statements, consecutive Five-
Year plans, and the “Made in China 2025” initiative all state China’s
intent to not only grow its economy but to actually supplant the U.S. as a
technological innovator. This is not simply garden-variety economic
competition, for several reasons. First, China’s heavily subsidized state-
owned enterprises are at the vanguard of this effort. Second, China is also
focusing on those technologies — including artificial intelligence — that
are critical for the future U.S. military advantage. The Made in China 2025
plan aims to catapult China to dominance in key manufacturing sectors like
technology and aerospace.
China’s economic strategy extends far beyond domestic policies. In
particular, its Belt and Road Initiative — potentially spanning some 60
countries — aims to exert greater Chinese political influence in and foster
greater economic dependence among nations in its immediate neighborhood and
beyond. Separately, China has demonstrated a penchant for using economic
coercion in support of its political objectives, such as curtailing economic
ties with South Korea over its deployment of a U.S. missile defense system.
The Trump administration is correctly elevating Chinese economic practices
as a national security issue. To build on the NSS, President Trump should
build a framework through which to respond to a direct challenge from China
and employ a broad array of national instruments. Use of traditional tools
alone, such as instituting tariffs and blocking foreign direct investment,
are not commensurate to the challenge and may harm U.S. business. Washington
must improve intelligence to understand the magnitude of the problem,
pursue sustained diplomacy, and generate economic defense plans in regions
where China seeks predominance.
Given our vast economic relationship with China, the United States requires
superior information from a broad range of sources to create a precise and
prudent framework. The president should charge the intelligence community,
or the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board (once its members are
appointed), with a comprehensive intelligence review to bolster our
knowledge of Chinese economic practices. The private sector, through the
Commerce and Treasury Departments, should inform our strategy given their
exposure and practical experience with China. But a sustained intelligence
collection campaign is also important given the inextricability and
murkiness around the Chinese state and its economic sector. Since Sept. 11,
2001, the U.S. intelligence community has made tremendous strides in
gathering financial intelligence, especially in tracking transfers among
terrorists, proliferators, and sanctions violators. President Trump should
make his mark by harnessing U.S. intelligence in countering Chinese economic
statecraft.
The United States must also enhance engagement with countries China is
attempting to coopt through BRI and other initiatives. The NSS should serve
as a catalyst for the United States to develop economic and security
priorities in critical countries and regions that demonstrate the value of
private sector-led growth, assisted as necessary by the government. To
counter the allure of Chinese loans for infrastructure, the United States
needs new means by which to give economically vulnerable states access to
capital. Beijing has a concrete economic agenda — one in which it attempts
to fill the void resulting from reduced U.S. engagement in the global trade
architecture. If Washington wants to compete for economic and political
influence, it needs to articulate its own vision.
Finally, the United States needs to accelerate the incorporation of economic
matters into its national security policymaking. China’s economic rise and
grand design has challenged U.S. predominance in economics and trade — a
core component of U.S. national power. China’s economic might has enabled
its use of economic coercion as a tool of foreign policy. The United States
needs a framework that includes an economic defense strategy in support of
allies pressured by Beijing. Washington needs to have the ability to assist
friends subjected to Chinese economic coercion in furtherance of our
national security objectives. Blunting economic coercion will require
substantial investments and the NSS is a first step in building a
comprehensive plan.
National security strategies are ultimately judged by their implementation.
If 2017 was about tax reform, 2018 will be about redefining our economic
relationships. A key part of this is elevating Chinese economic statecraft
as a national security priority deserving of more intelligence, policy focus
, and presidential capital. | n****g 发帖数: 14743 | 2 中···共·国现在蛮壮大的
美国虽然也知道辖区的华人受苦,但是也不愿意惹毛中···共·国
【在 G*********e 的大作中提到】 : Combatting Chinese Economic Coercion in the NSS : The Trump administration needs a robust plan to make sure America remains : the world’s most powerful economy. : 4 HOURS AGO : CATEGORIES: ELEPHANTS IN THE ROOM : Michael Allen : Featured image : This coming Monday, President Donald Trump will release his National : Security Strategy (NSS), a quadrennial executive effort to transform : campaign promises into a coherent framework to govern national security
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