In all the talk of America First — and of the United States as the indispensable nation — we Americans sometimes forget this doesn’t mean “America Alone.”
“Ultimately, a strong, resolute, and capable network of allies and partners is our key strategic advantage,” U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth recently informed the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. “China envies what we have together. And it sees what we can collectively bring to bear on defense.”
Hegseth was speaking directly to Indo-Pacific allies, whom he reminded: “it’s up to all of us to ensure that we live up to that potential by investing” to “quickly upgrade [our] own defenses.”
Our alliances of free nations in Europe and Asia constitute a huge edge against a bullying, totalitarian China.
My entire life, these past six decades, Big Daddy America was by far the biggest, best military on the block. Still is the best. But it’s no longer the biggest: China now has a bigger navy, much greater shipbuilding capacity, and many more soldiers in uniform. Technological and other strategic advantages have been diminished as well.
The defense secretary acknowledged that — after “a lot of ongoing conversations with our military leadership in the Indo-Pacific” — “there is something to be said for the fact that China calculates the possibility and does not appreciate the presence of other countries … as part of the dynamics or decision-making process, and, if that is reflected in their calculus, then that’s useful.”
We cannot afford to squander our “ally advantage.” We need each other.
This is Comon Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
Illustration created with Krea and Firefly
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One reply on “Still a Big Advantage”
We in the West squandered our economic advantage with globalization. Our business and political leaders went to China in search of cheap labor. Their technology transfers enabled China to fast track its development. We gave China the tools and the knowledge with which to weaken the West. Our western European ‘allies’ also went global. Their drive toward socialism means we have less and less in common. Those who lived behind the iron curtain for decades value their own freedom. Our allies in the Indo-Pacific and the former Warsaw Pact countries can and should be trusted. Western Europe? Not so much.