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Biden Continues Conflict With China Through The Quad

Above photo: US President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken (right) participate in a virtual meeting with leaders of Quadrilateral Security Dialogue countries March 12, 2021, at the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington. Alex Wong / Getty Images via AFP.

The real purpose of the Quad is not to advance solutions to the great challenges of our time, but to slow China’s technological progress.

On March 12, the heads of government of four countries, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, and US President Joe Biden, met for a virtual meeting of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, better known as the Quad.

Modi’s opening remarks illustrate the emptiness of the public agenda; he called the Quad “a force for global good” with no details beyond a list of areas of collaboration (“vaccines, climate change and emerging technologies”). There was no direct mention of China during the meeting.

In the details relating to the launching of “an ambitious new joint partnership that is going to boost vaccine manufacturing,” a more disturbing agenda reveals itself: The vaccines are meant for Southeast Asia, which is a core area of US contest against China, and the “emerging technologies” refers to the US desire to substitute products from its own high-tech firms and supplant the attractiveness of the Chinese high-tech industry.

The goal of the Quad is to intensify the military and economic pressure against China.

The Quad was created in the aftermath of the tsunami of 2004 and then deepened by US president Barack Obama as central to his “pivot to Asia.” But it did not take off until the US administration of Donald Trump began to rely on this grouping to tighten pressure on China.

It is for that reason that in late 2020, Trump gave the heads of government of Australia (Morrison), Japan (Shinzo Abe, the former prime minister of the country) and India (Modi) the highest US military decoration, the Legion of Merit. These three partners are key players in the US government’s pressure campaign against China.

US primacy in the region

In early January this year, the US government declassified a 2018 document prepared for the Trump administration. This document is called “US Strategic Framework for the Indo-Pacific.” The text clearly states that the US objective in Asia is to “maintain US primacy in the region.”

The idea of “primacy” has a long history in US foreign policy, going back to the early days after World War II. The US government, in a series of documents, stated that it would seek to be the leading power in the world, and it would shape the creation of global institutions to benefit the United States above all else. This is the meaning of the word “primacy.”

The drafters of the 2018 policy from the US National Security Council noted that the “threat” from China was not from its military. Rather, the United States worried about Chinese developments in “cutting-edge technologies, including artificial intelligence and bio-genetics.”

The US government’s objective, according to the document, was to “maintain American industry’s innovation edge vis-à-vis China,” which does not mean only to enhance US industry, but it also means to prevent China from getting access to technology and finance.

The war in the Pacific promoted by the US is not irrational. As this document further points out, “Loss of US pre-eminence in the Indo-Pacific would weaken our ability to achieve US interests globally.”

President Joe Biden’s administration, which has inherited this document, will not set it aside.

All signs show that Biden will continue to push the general line that the US must undermine Chinese scientific and technological development; this goal will be achieved not by the encouragement of US industry but by military threats and by the attempted use of US alliances to exclude Chinese firms from doing business in other countries.

At the Quad discussions, the four governments formed a Critical and Emerging Technology Working Group. The point of this group is for the four countries to collaborate on telecommunications and on tech standards.

This working group is tasked with convening “dialogues on critical technology supply chains,” which is a direct reference to the attempt to shut out China from any technology or raw materials that would have dual civilian and military usage. It has also been set up to encourage “cooperation on telecommunications deployment, diversification of equipment suppliers, and future telecommunications.”

The use of the word “diversification” is a direct reference to the US attempt to prevent Chinese firms such as Huawei and ZTE from supplanting Western telecommunications companies, which have less sophisticated 5G (fifth-generation) tools that are also far too expensive.

Be prepared to fight

Behind all this rhetoric on vaccines, climate change and technology lies an even uglier story. On March 9, Admiral Philip Davidson, who heads the US Navy’s Indo-Pacific Command, appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee. His statement before the committee was based on a report on the Indo-Pacific Command’s Pacific Deterrence Initiative.

That report asked the US Congress to double its outlay to $4.68 billion for 2022 ($22.69 billion for 2023 to 2027). Admiral Davidson said this money was essential because the US “absolutely must be prepared to fight and win should competition turn into conflict.” He further said that the trade war could easily accelerate into a hot war sooner than 2050.

A week before Davidson made these remarks, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken gave a wide-ranging speech about the Biden administration’s priorities. He listed the names of several countries that present the US with “serious challenges, including Russia, Iran, North Korea.”

“But the challenge posed by China is different,” he said.

“China is the only country with the economic, diplomatic, military and technological power to seriously challenge the stable and open international system,” Blinken said, referring to the world order set up to the advantage of the North Atlantic countries.

He was very explicit about who benefits from this system, saying that the system’s rules and values “make the world work the way we want it to, because it ultimately serves the interests and reflects the values of the American people.”

China threatens this, Blinken said, so the US must “engage China from a position of strength.” This is the real purpose of the Quad, not to advance solutions to the great challenges of our time (the pandemic, climate change, war, hunger), but to pressure China to cease its technological advance. If China does not surrender, the US – with the Quad in tow – is prepared to go to war.

This article was produced by Globetrotter, which provided it to Asia Times.

Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. He is the chief editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He is a senior non-resident fellow at Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China. He has written more than 20 books, including The Darker Nations and The Poorer Nations. His latest book is Washington Bullets, with an introduction by Evo Morales Ayma.

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