+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

The US military's top officer says Russia and China present different challenges - but they both can rival US power

Nov 9, 2018, 03:43 IST

China's Harbin (112) guided missile destroyer takes part in a week-long China-Russia navy exerciseAP Photo

Advertisement
  • The US and its allies are in a period of heightened tensions with Russia and China.
  • Despite the increased strain, it's not like the superpower showdown in the latter half of the 20th century that raised the risk of nuclear war, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has said.
  • But things could escalate, and the chairman encouraged further communication.

In September, Russian armed forces, joined by Chinese and Mongolian troops, gathered in the country's east for Vostok-18, an "unprecedented" military exercise that Russia said was the largest since 1981.

In October and November, all 29 NATO members and Sweden and Finland massed in Norway for Trident Juncture 2018, a regular exercise that this year was the largest version since the Cold War, according to NATO officials.

Joining Trident Juncture was the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman, which sailed into the Arctic Circle west of Norway on October 19, becoming the first US aircraft carrier to do so since the early 1990s.

These events, plus heightened tensions between Russia and NATO and other close encounters between them, have given many the impression the world has returned to a Cold War.

Advertisement

In this June 13, 2017, file photo. Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford listens on Capitol Hill in Washington.Associated Press/Jacquelyn Martin

According to Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that's not the case, but there are now real challenges to US power.

"I wouldn't suggest that it's a Cold War," Dunford said on Monday during an event at Duke University. "But if you think about the 1990s," after the collapse of the Soviet Union, he added, "the United States had no competitor, and as we look at Russia and China today, we see Russia and China as peer competitors."

Read more: NATO's biggest military exercise in years just started, but Russia may be more worried about 2 countries that aren't members of the alliance

Tensions in Europe have been elevated for some time.

Advertisement

In the early 2000s, not long after Vladimir Putin rose to power in Moscow, the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia joined NATO, bringing the alliance into a region that Russia has long considered sensitive.

An U.S. Navy picture shows what appears to be a Russian Sukhoi SU-24 attack aircraft flying over the U.S. guided missile destroyer USS Donald Cook in the Baltic SeaThomson Reuters

A decade later, fearing NATO would be invited into strategic areas of the Black Sea region, Russia annexed Crimea in Ukraine and has remained involved in the simmering conflict there in the years since.

Since then, NATO has boosted its presence in Eastern Europe in response, with more US armored rotations and the stationing of multinational battle groups in Poland and the Baltic states.

China, too, has grow in power over the past two decades. It has been increasingly active in its near abroad, making expansive claims over the South China Sea, which its neighbors dispute and an international tribunal rejected.

Advertisement

The US has played a major role in contesting those claims, leading freedom-of-navigation exercises in the region to ensure waterways remain open. That has led to confrontations with Chinese forces on sea and in the air.

But increased tensions don't mean the world has returned to the status quo ante, Dunford said.

In this Sept. 23, 2015, file photo, Chinese Coast Guard members approach Filipino fishermen as they confront each other off Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea, also called the West Philippine Sea.AP Photo/Renato Etac

"It doesn't necessarily equate to a Cold War. Competition doesn't have to be conflict," he said during the event. "But ... from a military perspective, we have two states now that can challenge our ability to project power and challenge us in all five domains" - ground, sea, air, space, and cyberspace - "and that's what's different than in the 1990s."

Though he described them as new challenges, he characterized the US response to each of them differently.

Advertisement

During meetings with his Russian counterparts, Dunford said he has tried to "make it clear that what you're seeing in our posture, what you're seeing in the increased forces that we have put in Europe, what you're seeing in the path of capability development that we're on, is in order to deter a conflict, not to fight, and in order to make sure that we can meet our alliance commitments in NATO."

"Russia has made a concerted effort over the last 10 years to increase their capabilities," including at sea, on land, in space and cyberspace, and with nuclear weapons, he added, "So I've tried to explain to them is that what we are doing is responding to that challenge that they pose."

Reuters/Maxim ShemetovRussian servicemen parade in tanks during celebrations for the 72nd anniversary of the end of World War II in Red Square in Moscow.

In contrast, in the Pacific region - where the US recently renamed its combatant command as Indo-Pacific Command in what as seen as a compliment to India and a slight to China - the US is trying to ensure everyone plays by the same rules, Dunford said.

"China is irritated by what we do, but again, [we] try to explain to them that, look, there is a rules-based international order, and we talk about a free and open Indo-Pacific based on international law, norms, and standards," he said.

Advertisement

Now read: Weeks after a showdown in the South China Sea, the Navy's top officer says the US and China will 'meet more and more on high seas'

"What we are doing in the Pacific is we're flying, operating, and sailing wherever international law allows, and the purpose of that is to demonstrate that we are standing up for those rules."

In addition to claiming a vast swath of the South China Sea, Beijing has reclaimed land on reefs and islands there and, on some of them, constructed military outposts.

China's Harbin guided missile destroyer, left, and the DDG-139 Ningbo Sovremenny-class Type-956EM destroyer, right.AP

The US and others have rejected those claims and continued to treat the area as international waters, which has led to a number of close encounters.

Advertisement

Dunford encouraged continued diplomacy with China, and he spoke positively about his interactions with Chinese military leadership, saying they had been able to perform "confidence-building measures" and to "increase transparency and reduce the risk of miscalculation."

But he also said a "coherent, collective response" was necessary and that, like other US officials, he had made plain to Beijing the US's objections.

"I learned early in my career that if you see something that is not to standard or not within the law and you ignore it, you've set a new standard, and it's lower," Dunford said Monday. "When I talked to my Chinese counterpart, I said, look, this is not about a pile of rocks in the Pacific. It's about enforcing international law and a coherent response to your violation of international law."

NOW WATCH: Here's why so many nations want to control the South China Sea - and what China wants to do

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article