Ulson Gunnar
May 13, 2014
The reversal of longstanding policy preventing the US from using Filipino territory for military bases signifies and escalation in tensions between the United States and China, as well as exposes the true nature of the US "pivot" toward Asia.
US troops returning to the Philippines signals an attempt by Washington to reassert itself in the Pacific against growing regional powers, China chief among them. (AFP) |
The Guardian in its article, "Philippines agrees to 10-year pact allowing US military presence," states that, "the United States and the Philippines have reached a 10-year pact that would allow a larger US military presence in this south-east Asian nation as it grapples with increasingly tense territorial disputes with China, White House officials said on Sunday." The article would go on to claim that the move seeks to "deter China's increasingly assertive stance in disputed territories" but that it could "encourage China to intensify its massive military buildup."
For many geopolitical analysts, the move comes as no surprise. The "pivot" toward Asia, while promoted as America's attempt to reengage in the region diplomatically, was in fact nothing more than an attempt for the US to reassert itself as a hegemonic power against a rising China. The encirclement of China with a bloc of pro-Western Southeast Asian regimes has been the cornerstone of US policy in Asia for decades.
Containing China: America's Ongoing Project
As early as 1997, US policy makers were articulating a means of containing China's rise. One such policy maker, Robert Kagan, stated in his 1997 op-ed, "What China Knows That We Don't: The Case for a New Strategy of Containment," that, "the choice we face is not between containment and engagement, but between an ineffective, unconscious, and therefore dangerous containment -- which is what we have now -- and a conscious and consistent containment that effectively deters and ultimately does change China."
Kagan and other US policy makers' desire to "change China," includes the political reordering of the country within through covert subversion and the fueling of violent separate movements along its peripheries, as well as the military encirclement of China abroad. The recent pact between the Philippines and the US, giving American military might a new foothold in the Pacific, represents one of many attempts to encircle China.
To understand this encirclement deeper, one must read through the 2006 US Army War College Strategic Studies Institute's report titled, "String of Pearls: Meeting the Challenge of China's Rising Power Across the Asian Littoral." The 36 page report details the geopolitical and strategic background within which this latest pact between the Philippines and the US was signed.
Continue reading at New Eastern Outlook...
Continue reading at New Eastern Outlook...