When the White House announced that US Vice President Kamala Harris would visit Singapore and Vietnam in August, Asia watchers scratched their heads. Sure, Washington has ground to make up in Southeast Asia. But of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, why return to two of the countries that US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin already visited in July?
The answer is simple: the Biden administration is playing it safe. This is not just to keep things easy for Harris, who has relatively little foreign-policy experience. The administration is aiming low because of underlying weaknesses in its approach to Asia, as we argue in a forthcoming United States Studies Centre report.
For all the administration’s rhetoric about strategic competition with China, it has yet to present a serious Indo-Pacific policy — or its most important element, an effective economic strategy for the region. Had Harris visited countries other than the two US-friendly stops prepared by Austin, Washington would have had to put much more on the table to secure a warm welcome.
Singapore and Vietnam are safe options for a visit by an inexperienced vice president in a region fraught with potential pitfalls and challenges. Singapore is the only country in Southeast Asia that gives the United States reliable military access. Its leaders are the region’s savviest strategists, recognizing a US military presence as necessary to preserve their own strategic autonomy and the broader regional balance. This makes Singapore eager to do what it can to enmesh the United States in the region.
Since the 2016 election of President Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines, which put the traditional US-Philippines alliance in a quandary, Vietnam has been the country in the region most willing to overtly defy China. In the South China Sea, Hanoi has seen Washington as an essential part of the strategic balance and its efforts to deter Beijing.
While US-Vietnamese military ties remain limited and the Vietnam War still casts its long shadow over the two countries’ relations, Hanoi’s deep distrust of Beijing creates a strong rationale for further expansion of US-Vietnamese ties.
For all the administration’s rhetoric about strategic competition with China, it has yet to present a serious Indo-Pacific policy.
In both Singapore and Vietnam, strategic elites speak a language on China that resonates with their American interlocutors. Both countries see the United States’ presence in the region as vital for their future security. In neither country is public opinion much of a constraint. All of this means that Harris is knocking on open doors. Even if the United States doesn’t get everything it wants in terms of stepped-up defense ties, the atmospherics during both visits were certainly expected to be warm and positive.
This would not have been a sure thing elsewhere in Southeast Asia. Austin got a good result in Manila, where he secured an agreement to maintain the Visiting Forces Agreement, which enables the US military to operate bases in the Philippines. But further progress, such as full implementation of the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement, which would expand the US military’s footprint in the Philippines and enhance interoperability between both armed forces, is unlikely under Duterte.
The other obvious candidates for a Harris visit, Indonesia and Thailand, would have been more challenging. Thailand’s reluctance to lend support to broader US strategic objectives vis-à-vis China means the Biden administration can expect little from Bangkok, despite the country’s official designation as a “major non-NATO ally.”
And Indonesia, despite its weight and potentially powerful regional and strategic role, remains inwardly focused, transactional, and cautious about overtly challenging China. Any progress in security ties will be incremental, unlikely to lend itself to ambitious deliverables for a vice presidential visit.
Yet the United States cannot achieve its goal of maintaining a favorable balance of power in the Indo-Pacific region without engaging more deeply all across Southeast Asia, not just in a few US-friendly capitals. Southeast Asia’s size and strategic geography — and the fluidity of countries’ alignment decisions — make it the region where US-Chinese competition for influence is most intense.
Biden’s Asia hands seem to understand this. White House Indo-Pacific Coordinator Kurt Campbell has publicly recognised that the United States must do more in Southeast Asia. Beginning with Austin’s visit, Washington has substantially increased official contacts with the region’s key capitals.
Even so, there are worrying signs that the Biden administration more broadly underestimates the urgency and scope of what’s required to effectively constrain China’s rapidly growing influence in the region. While Biden has identified competition with China and Russia as central to US foreign policy, his main focus has been on strengthening US power at home with domestic economic and technological initiatives.
Internationally, he has focused on broader global coalition-building, especially with traditional democratic allies in Europe.
This approach means the administration is overlooking urgent issues in the Indo-Pacific. On defense, it has cut funding for short-term deterrence in favor of long-term preparedness to address China as a future threat. On economics, it seems to have no interest in joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), the free trade arrangement created by 11 countries after the United States pulled out of regional trade negotiations.
Instead, the Biden administration favors infrastructure financing initiatives that might be less contentious than trade with the American public but will take years or even decades to be realised. Meanwhile, Southeast Asia is pulled ever more deeply into China’s economic sphere of influence.
Without an economic strategy for the region, Washington’s influence risks being further undermined. Former US president Barack Obama’s pivot to Asia, of which Southeast Asia would have been the primary beneficiary, was driven by an understanding that the United States would benefit from deeper integration with growing economies in the Indo-Pacific. This conviction led the Obama administration to negotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the predecessor agreement to the CPTPP. Although the pivot failed to deliver, it was the right approach. But Biden’s team is not even trying to return to one of the pivot’s key components: a regional economic strategy to balance China’s growing clout.
Even as Harris’ visit generates goodwill and increases momentum, Washington should not take too much comfort from this trip.
In a region that tends to value economic cooperation more highly than security ties, the absence of a shared prosperity agenda makes it difficult for Washington to approach Southeast Asia in a positive way — and not just as a derivative of strategic competition with China. Having ditched a trade agreement as a priority, the Biden administration has lowered its ambition and is exploring a digital trade agreement instead. It has also offered to host the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in 2023.
In Southeast Asia, these initiatives will be seen for what they are: a weak substitute for a comprehensive approach to economic cooperation, which is especially crucial as the region seeks to recover from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Biden administration also needs to convince the region that its global democracy agenda won’t get in the way of its Indo-Pacific strategy. Convincing Vietnam and Singapore is comparatively easy. While both are authoritarian states, neither will let Biden’s ideological approach stand in the way of closer ties. They are too deeply invested in a robust US regional security presence.
But Singapore and Vietnam are the exceptions, not the rule, in Southeast Asia. Other countries remain circumspect and will need more convincing. Even as Harris’ visit generates goodwill and increases momentum, Washington should not take too much comfort from this trip. Without a comprehensive Indo-Pacific strategy — with a strong and urgent focus on economic issues and Southeast Asia — competing with China in the rest of the region will be much harder.
Susannah Patton is a research fellow in the Foreign Policy and Defence Program at the University of Sydney’s United States Studies Centre. Twitter: @susannahcpatton.
Ashley Townshend is the director of the Foreign Policy and Defence Program at the University of Sydney’s United States Studies Centre. Twitter: @ashleytownshend.
The teaser for this article referred to SE Asia as “our backyard”.
Not the most diplomatic of phrases to describe the region.
We are more that region’s front garden – nice & showy but of no consequence, the gargantuan holes are in our backyard.
This article is very starry-eyed about both Harris and the chances US can wield any real influence in the southeast Asia region. Harris is viewed as a complete lightweight by her global counterparts, and after her visit to Hanoi, the Vietnamese PM jumped straight on to the phone to Chinese ambassador to reassure they not interested in allying with the US, and won’t respond to US bribes.
Her grandstanding in both Singapore and Vietnam only served to make US relationship even more fragile with those countries – the opposite of the intent.
But really, why is Crikey allowing USSC to burn oxygen on this platform – is it an attempt to somehow be even-handed? The USSC is a shill for the pro-war machine in the US – just check out where a large part of their funding comes from – two major weapons & war machine manufacturers. They could be better described as one of many offshore US propaganda machines.
At least these two authors acknowledge the challenges of US gaining any significant influence, but methinks that ship has largely sailed, given US behaviour in recent decades. Best focus inwards on solving their own population’s problems than continually meddling and manipulating others for the benefit of their largest corporate donors and elites.
Not forgetting the ASPI.
CIA shills the lot of them.
CIA flaks the lot of them.
Not forgetting the ASPI.
Why Vietnam would want to have anything to do with the U.S. beggars belief.
I spent almost a decade in VN as an AusAID volunteer (and I am former anti VN war demonstrator) and it was a matter of some astonishment to me that so many Vietnamese seemed to hold the US in such high regard.
Then I consider how supine is the Australian attitude to the US and ponder US hegemony in general.
My impression is that the Vietnamese are clear-sighted about their own interests, understand their history and the geography of their region. They are not distracted by sentimental considerations. As the article says they know the part China has played in their country in past centuries and they are well aware of its presence and intentions now. Because Vietnam does not wish to be under China’s thumb (again) it needs another powerful nation as a counter-balance. This does not beggar belief. It demonstrates a pragmatic policy.
Or China for that matter.
Not many Asian countries are interested in taking the economic haircut to benefit US interests like Australia did. Many Asian countries are doing very well because of China. Funny that the US as well as Australia considers authoritarian countries like Singapore and Vietnam as like minded and shared values. And it’s absolute nonsense to suggest Obama’s ‘Pivot to Asia’ policy was aimed to benefit South East Asia. Even Blind Freddie could see it was to thwart the rise of China’s economy and growing influence in SE Asia.. The Pivot to Asia policy was started in 2011 and China recognising the threat did not start to occupy and develop the barren South Sea shoals till 2013. As for Australia, now the China beef market has been taken off us by the US. Their beef exports to China are at record highs whilst ours are plummeting. Even New Zealand beef export to China are rising.
Wouldn’t Japan be a good country for Harris to visit?
No need, Japan is a 100% vassal state, why waste the fuel getting there.