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Robert Williams and Moritz Rudolf envision an EU-led de-escalation intitative for the growing tensions between the US and China, reminiscent of the Helsinki Process of the 1970s

Public Policy / opinion
Robert Williams and Moritz Rudolf envision an EU-led de-escalation intitative for the growing tensions between the US and China, reminiscent of the Helsinki Process of the 1970s
US, China, EU flags

European countries are currently divided over whether to join US President Joe Biden’s diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympics in Beijing. The episode underscores yet again that when it comes to dealing with China, Europe and the United States truly are an ocean apart.

Beyond sharing fundamental political values, the US and Europe often employ similar rhetoric about the challenge China poses to the international order. Nonetheless, most European governments cannot reconcile their interests with the vision of a US-led coalition of democracies standing up to the world’s autocracies, and European officials balk at pursuing a China policy focused on containment, under the guise of competition.

While the European Union wants to deepen transatlantic cooperation, there is no consensus on how to do so without alienating China or undermining the very international system it aims to defend. Nor are European governments convinced of America’s reliability as a partner. Biden might value the transatlantic relationship, but his predecessor, Donald Trump, did not. Who is to say what the next US president – possibly Trump himself – will stand for? This doubt is a key motivation behind the EU’s effort to operationalize its vision of “strategic autonomy.”

To be sure, there is scope for transatlantic collaboration on China. In fact, efforts to advance such cooperation are already in motion, in the form of initiatives like the US-EU Dialogue on China and the US-EU Trade and Technology Council. Joint action to counter China’s anti-competitive commercial and trade practices, export and investment restrictions in response to China’s human-rights abuses, and a push for high standards for overseas infrastructure projects should be welcomed.

But the current US-EU agenda on China might be overly ambitious. Clearer prioritization is needed to maximize the benefits of coordination. Furthermore, differing legal systems and threat perceptions in the US and Europe will make progress in key areas – such as carbon taxes, antitrust policy, or responses to Chinese disinformation campaigns – painfully slow.

The prospects for meaningful military and security cooperation vis-à-vis China are especially limited. While European countries have made some symbolic moves – for example, the German warship Bayern recently demonstrated the right to free passage in the South China Sea – they are wary of going much further.

This is the case even for France, the only European country with a significant military presence in the Indo-Pacific. As French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian recently explained, “We do not underestimate the depth of competition with China, which can be ferocious, and the need for a constant evaluation of risks, but we try to avoid the militarization of our strategy to allow us to include – respectful of their sovereignty – all interested countries.”

This unwillingness to take a hard stance on China is set to persist. While Germany’s new government does appear likely to adopt a somewhat firmer tone, Chancellor Olaf Scholz has taken a cautious line, making clear that all actions should be “carefully weighed” and emphasizing the need to seek a cooperative approach.

So, the US should not expect Germany to start viewing relations with China through a primarily ideological lens any time soon. The communication failures surrounding the AUKUS defense agreement between Australia, the United Kingdom, and the US – a deal that blindsided France, which lost a major defense contract – further underscore the limits of US-Europe military cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.

But transatlantic cooperation is hardly the only way Europe can influence the US-China relationship – and mitigate the risks that its rapid deterioration implies. Strategists are currently scrambling to draw lessons from history and devise an approach that enables the two sides to compete without catastrophe, particularly armed conflict. Europe can help here.

The EU should consider launching a diplomatic initiative reminiscent of the Helsinki Process, credited with reducing tensions between the Soviet and Western blocs in the 1970s. Through such a process, Europe could broker agreements to promote de-escalation, risk reduction, and crisis management, thereby reducing the likelihood of armed conflict.

Europe’s limited capacity to project military power in the Indo-Pacific could be an asset in this context, as it bolsters European actors’ credibility as honest brokers and trusted intermediaries. Compared to more direct stakeholders, the EU might be better positioned to mediate thorny issues such as Taiwan and the South China Sea. It might even be able to promote constructive diplomacy in the domains of cyber and outer space. In these contexts, American and Chinese forces regularly operate in proximity, and a miscalculation could lead to war.

No one should underestimate the difficulty of establishing rules of the road that are robust enough to avert conflict. But Europe has a comparative advantage in this area – one that it has demonstrated repeatedly in the past. For example, the European Commission and European countries played a central role in delivering multilateral export-control regimes, such as the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the Wassenaar Arrangement. Europe has also played a critical role in negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program.

An EU-led de-escalation initiative in the Indo-Pacific is far from a sure thing, especially given the recent increase in tensions between the EU and China. But it would align with the EU’s professed goal of pursuing an inclusive approach to the region that strengthens the rules-based international order. More important, it offers perhaps the best chance of averting war between great powers. Is that not why the EU was created?


Robert Williams, a senior research scholar and lecturer at Yale Law School, is Executive Director of Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. Moritz Rudolf is a postdoctoral fellow at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center. Copyright 2021 Project Syndicate, here with permission.

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38 Comments

Ha - Trump still being blamed for EU reluctance to stand up and be counted for freedom and democracy against totalitarian or dangerous regimes.  Look at Austria currently as an example of European values.  
 

Maybe global analysts should keep an eye on Iran and Syria with Russian influence ready to attack Israel rather than worrying about China.  And how the EU would likely refuse to defend democracy there as well leaving it to the USA and UK as usual.  

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how the EU would likely refuse to defend democracy there as well leaving it to the USA and UK as usual.  

 

i dont think we live in the same world bud 

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Look at their track record: passive non-involvement in many theatres that need action.  
 

The EU has issues just getting organised to defend itself. 
https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/05/21/exactly-how-helpless-is-europe/

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like in vietnam and irak ?

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Iraq. 
What’s the EU doing about Hong Kong and the arrests, imprisonment and abuse of those involved in free media or protest? 
https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/hong-kong-police-arrest-…

 

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you are delusional if you believe the us cares about hk.

The only intent was to destabilize china nothing more.

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Well the article is primarily about what role the EU could play around China issues.  
 

The Olympic Games boycott is around protesting Chinas mistreatment of its people & the annexation of Hong Kong  

https://time.com/6129154/beijing-olympics-boycott/

 

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Probably because Biden can’t remember what he said last week! 

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“This time, officials in Washington and the other participating capitals cite human rights abuses in China, including atrocities against Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, and the crackdown on the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong.”

 

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You have a totalitarian regime right here in your back yard.  

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There is too the problem for China inherent to any great military force, being all dressed up with nowhere to go, and said force is hugely invested, strategically & tactically, in land manoeuvres. India is now well alerted. Vietnam wary & making new friends. Mongolia, still well connected to Russian patronage. And don’t even think about Taiwan, not with all those US nuke subs whereabouts unknown.

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China unlikely to directly act militarily, although with the current mentally incapable US President ‘in place’ they may like to exploit the situation. 

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/11/china-taiwan-invasion-phili…

China is busy with their soft power into Taiwan (like they are in NZ) so eventually may not need to force their way in.  

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Hong Kong though, by way of precedent,  offers neither incentive nor comfort, on that scenario.

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China is busy with their soft power into Taiwan (like they are in NZ) so eventually may not need to force their way in.  

Taiwan's exports to China are up almost 50% since Dec. 2019 and amount to 36% of its GDP, about the same ratio as for Vietnam.

@ElbridgeColby

wants to stop China from assimilating Asia. It's a little late for that. Link

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China's soft power operations have been remarkably successful in most large western countries for some time now. The United Front also has strong political affiliations here in NZ which we were very slow to recognise & they are also very active in business & community (social) circles in key places throughout the country. Having being witness to the huge leakage of IP from just about every civilised nation to China over the past 30-40 years, I'd have to rate it as one of the most successful (both) overt & covert acquisitions of intel the world has ever seen, just based on shear volume alone.

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if the US is a tiger in a jungle, then the only way for a country to maintain peace with a tiger is to become another tiger.

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China’s crimes against humanity internally simply reveal the nature of this regime to the world.  
 

https://www.hrw.org/report/2021/04/19/break-their-lineage-break-their-r…

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Trying to make this kind of moral equivalency is what makes the West so fractured/weak.  
Would ZeroHedge run stories in 1950 of how terrible the UK was for fire bombing Dresden in WW2?   

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Human Rights Watch is not an outlier or left wing organisation. It is very much a part of the establishment in the United States and is not generally associated with hard hitting criticism that conflicts with the promoted interests of the American state. Kenneth Roth, the Human Rights Watch CEO who has been in power longer than Putin, is a darling of the New York liberal and Democratic Party Establishment. That is an important financial source for HRW and includes many members of New York’s highly altruistic liberal Jewish community.

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""Break their lineage, break their roots, break their connections, and break their origins. Completely shovel up the roots of 'two-faced people,' dig them out, and vow to fight these two-faced people until the end.

—Maisumujiang Maimuer, Chinese religious affairs official, August 10, 2017, on a Xinhua Weibo page.

Wikipedia: Human Rights Watch shared in the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize.  Roth is criticized by the Jerusalem-based NGO Monitor for allegedly being biased against Israel. 

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Maybe it would have been better if the US had not got involved but Iraq & Syria from 2014 to 2018 were not peaceful places. Yazidis, Kurds, Christians, Ahmadis, etc were victims of violence from both local and non-US foreign forces. Many more than the loss of life from the US airforce.  If the US helped the demise of ISIS then it was probably on balance good.  A complex issue not to be compared with current CCP actions in Xinjiang where a place that was basically peaceful has become a hell on earth for Chinese Muslims. 

Wikipedia: Estimates of the total number of deaths in the Syrian Civil War, by opposition activist groups, vary between 494,438 and about 606,000 as of June 2021. On 23 April 2016, the United Nations and Arab League Envoy to Syria put out an estimate of 400,000 that had died in the war.

A military force risks civilian (innocent) lives.  It is different from a police force but even in NZ it has been known for police to accidentally kill bystanders but we have never asked to police to stop trying to apprehend violent criminals.

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If the US helped the demise of ISIS then it was probably on balance good.

Hmmmm.... Treatment of Julian mirrors US & allies’ ‘corruption, criminality’ – Assange’s father to RT

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My poor knowledge of the war in Syria is insufficient to say what effect the USA had either good or bad.  However comparing the treatment of Julian Assange as mirroring the broadcasting of the burning a Jordanian pilot in a cage alive or selling Yazidi schoolgirls in a slave market or pushing gays of the top of high buildings - well it just doesn't compare.

Assange has been in a maximum security prison in the UK since 2019; not fun but better than being burnt alive, pushed of a high building or being forced into sexual slavery.

The treatment of Uighurs is better than ISIS's treatment of outsiders, worse than the treatment of Julian Assange. And there are over 10 million Uighurs. 

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Shocking.

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The civilian population of the states has no appetite for war against anyone.They are already at war with themselves in the big cities.

Only supporters of a war would be those old warmongers in the Senate and Congress,and based on recent results they would be hammered imo.

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And the Wall Street corporations that profit from the military industrial complex.  US needs a war, to justify their trillion dollar (plus) security budget.  Surely some country is producing weapons of mass destruction or are trading oil for something other than dollars or maybe they are just not for democracy and freedom....  Why attack China when they buy their debt to produce their goods?  The low hanging fruit is gone, perhaps they could send the military into Africa and forcibly jab em all.  All for the sake of freedom and democracy!

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A war between Western Democracies and China might be a good thing at this geo-political juncture.  It's on the cards Covid has brought world economies to the economic brink; WW2 got USA out of the Great Depression of the 1930s, and in a perverse way got Germany out of the mother of all inflationary spirals.

War is a permanent condition of mankind and even our first evolutionary cousins, the chimpanzees, manifest the same bellicosity.

It's increasingly difficult to know which side, if any, NZ should take if the worse came to the worse. 

NZ is becoming increasingly ungovernable and demographic projections don't bode well.  Chinese governance could offer us the best solution.  And I don't think we can regard Australia as a friend anymore since it began belligerently thrusting upon us the 501s which after all have been brought up in Australia.

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NZ is becoming increasingly ungovernable and demographic projections don't bode well.  Chinese governance could offer us the best solution

Interesting point of view. Would you please expand on that?

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By some blatantly subjective reasoning NZ considers NZrs are being singled out by this Australian expulsion policy. Not so. Greeks,Turks,Maltese, Brits and more. Break Australian law, not a citizen, go back then where you are one. QED!

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He's dreaming.  The EU will not do anything to stop the US.  Other than cosmetic. 

The USA always needs a problem somewhere in the world to rattle it's sabre about.  Preferably a portfolio of those.  You can readily think of five or six right now.

Their problem is from Vietnam on they lose.   And they have been pointless.  Afghanistan.  Should have been there 3 months max. Iraq. Should not have been there at all.

As for Iraq.  When the French were reticent about that the USA got hoity toity and created Freedom Fries.  Say no more.

The USA will continue to do the weird thing they do.  And the EU will stand back. 

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Despite their faults, without the USA over the last 80 years the world would be a far more dangerous place for most countries & people.  

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No true, actually the opposite in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.  Millions killed, and saved from what? 

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What faults, bombing 30 countries since WW2?  It would be a far safer place without the military industrial complex and Wall Streets business model of unwinnable wars creating a great revenue stream.

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Pretty much the last time the USA made the world a safer place was WW2. Since then they should have stayed out of everyone else's business. Funny thing was they had to be pulled kicking and screaming into WW2, now they just like to invade countries at the drop of a hat.

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After WW2, the US economy boomed because they produced everything, and paid off their debt.  When you produce more than you consume the gold standard works well.  Then came the unwinnable Vietnam war, that enriched Wall Street business, and taxpayers did not want to pay for it, nor did Nixon want to give up the gold.  Having the world's fiat reserve currency solved the problem and the neocons have been having a blast spending ever since.  Unwinnable wars are a great revenue stream, bombs, tanks, ammo, planes, guns, etc.  Wall Street business profits for all the carnage, a great business model indeed.

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