The Ukraine War – Lessons For Australia & The Asia/Pacific
We often look
to history or contemporary events to help explain issues and
to seek guidance. Thus Graham Allison went back millennia to
explain America’s current drive to war with China in his
Thucydides
Trap. Recently Gregory
Clark joined others in making the natural comparison
between Ukraine and Taiwan. Analogies are admittedly fraught
with danger – parallels are never exact, the present never
fits easily into the past and superficially similar events
may be essentially very different – but they can be
fruitful. A case in point is the Ukraine war –
America’s proxy war against Russia – and the lessons
this might hold for Australia and the region in respect of
America’s struggle against China. The origins and
course of the war have two aspects – the local, which is
specific to the Ukraine, and the geopolitical, which has
parallels of great relevance. The creation of NATO and the
‘containment’ of China spring from the same imperial
roots. The US expansion of NATO had the aim of producing a
crisis that would remove Putin and instal a more compliant
government in Moscow – Yeltsin#2 – and a fragmentation
of the Russian Federation. The parallels here with US
strategy towards China
are obvious but there is also a more fundamental shared
issue in play – how
to deal with Eurasia Eurasia is the huge continent
that stretches from the Atlantic to the Pacific with two
main island nations on the periphery – Britain and Japan.
The northern segment is comprised of three main parts –
China, Russia and the rest of Europe (here simply
‘Europe’). There is a direct line in American
geostrategic thinking stretching back to the British
geographer Halford Mackinder (1861-1947), who is considered
the father of geopolitics
and geostrategy and is best known for his Heartland
concept: Who rules East Europe commands
the Heartland: Who rules the Heartland commands
the World-Island: Who rules the World-Island
commands the World. Mackinder saw the
land power of Russia, now transformed by railways, as
invulnerable and his fear was that if combined with Germany
with its greater access to the sea together, they would
dominate the world, displacing British sea power. It follows
from this that Germany, and by extension Europe, must be
kept separate from Russia and the rest of
Eurasia. Mackinder’s most notable American successor
was Zbigniew
Brzezinski who saw NATO and EU expansion within an
American-controlled Europe as the key to the subordination
of Russia and the domination of
Eurasia. Brzezinski’s current reincarnations are
Victoria Nuland, architect of the 2014 Ukraine coup and
Anthony Blinken, Secretary of State. The Ukraine war
is the predictable
result of this geostrategic push to use Europe to destroy
Russia but the ‘Weaponisation of Europe’ has another
dimension. Europe must be decoupled from the rest of Eurasia
not merely politically but also economically. This is
exemplified by Germany
being cut off from Russian energy, which had been a driver
of its economic strength, both by diktat in the form of
sanctions and by deed with the sabotage
of the Nord Stream gas pipelines. Germany is facing a degree
of deindustrialisation
with energy intensive industries relocating to China and
to the US. This haemorrhaging of Europe is advantageous to
the US in that it removes competition, but it also weakens
Europe’s role as a force multiplier. Ukraine is devastated,
with worse to come and Europe faces a bleak future. America
is not good at orderly withdrawal, as illustrated by the
Afghanistan debacle, and it is unclear how Biden will
extricate the US in order to concentrate on China. It may
well be that Zelensky’s approach to Xi may push the matter
out of his hands; peace in Ukraine brokered
by China would be a devastating blow. Turning to
the Asia/Pacific we see the other side of the Eurasian
challenge. Here Japan (with Korea) is the equivalent of
Germany. Mackinder
had a dire warning. Russia had little access to the sea
but: Were the Chinese, for instance,
organised by the Japanese, to overthrow the Russian Empire
and conquer its territory, they might constitute the yellow
peril to the world’s freedom. For
the first half of the 20th century the US fought with Japan
over the control of China but with Japan’s defeat the
prime object became to separate it from the Eurasian
mainland, hence the division of Korea to create a buffer.
America’s imperial wars fostered high economic growth on
the periphery – Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea – which
became competitors as well as force multipliers in the
struggle with the Soviet Union/ Russia and China. Just as
sanctions against Russia have devastated Europe so also are
sanctions against China – semi-conductors prominently –
debilitating
the Asian allies. It is unlikely that Australia will escape
pressure to decouple from China despite the economic damage
it will suffer. The big difference with Europe is that
if the US precipitates war against China it will not be a
proxy one. There are three hotspots. The South China Sea,
where America would be a direct combatant, the Korean
peninsula, where the US has wartime
control of the South Korean military and so is
immediately involved. It seems that the game plan for Taiwan
is an Air/Sea
battle where Taiwan is a tethered goat, and the US with
Japan the initial combatants, with South Korea, Australia
perhaps Europe to follow. Any country which hosts US bases
used in the war will be automatically included; Australia
may be at a distance but, having ceded sovereignty,
it is a front-line
state. The similarity with Europe is that all the
Asia/Pacific allies will be pawns, bearing the brunt of the
human, physical and economic costs, to be sacrificed if
necessary. For Australia, which has greater freedom of
action than Japan, South Korea or Taiwan, to ignore the
lessons of Europe and willingly accept the fate of a pawn
is the height of stupidity. The United States is
fighting a proxy war in western Eurasia – Europe – and
soon may be at war with China in the east. The prize is a
continuation of American hegemony or its replacement by
multipolarity. This talk examines Anglo-American thinking
about Eurasia since Mackinder and how this illuminates the
current situation. It will also discuss some questions this
raises for New Zealand going forward. Some
background for the talk including Mackinder's world island
theory may be found in this article by Tim Beal published in
John Menadue's Australian website 'Pearls and Irritations'
https://johnmenadue.com/the-ukraine-war-lessons-for-australia-and-the-asia-pacific/ Location ENDS Dr Tim
Beal: Author, Researcher, Educator, Asia
specialist Tim Beal is a retired NZ academic who has written
extensively on Asia, with a focus on Northeast Asia. He also
has an interest in imperialism, again mainly in respect of
Asia but recently, also inevitably encompassing
Europe
When
Tuesday
June 13th, 2023 from 5:30 PM to 7:00
PM
2/57 Willis
Street
Wellington,
New
Zealand