Cerramos el año con un notable, largo ensayo de Andrew Korybko; el
foco del mismo es Eurasia y sus conflictos; básicamente, de lo que ocurre en la
mayor y más poblada masa continental del planeta en el medio de la tensión
multipolaridad-unipolaridad. El contexto es el de las batallas (finales?) de un Imperio en decadencia contra las fuerzas
que se le oponen. Se habla de todo un poco: de lo que ocurrió este año que se
va, de lo que está ocurriendo ahora mismo, y de lo que puede ocurrir en 2016.
El ensayo fue publicado recientemente en el sitio web The Vineyard of the Saker
(thesaker.is). Lo que sigue es largo, chicos, pero ya se sabe que este no es un
sitio para twitteros.
Feliz año para todos!
Título: 2016
Trends Forecast, mega analysis by Andrew Korybko
Texto: 2015 has
proven to be a monumental year full of geopolitical surprises, with Russia’s
anti-terrorist intervention in Syria being chief among them. The old world
order is changing at a rapid pace as rising multipolar forces push outwards
against the resistant unipolar establishment. Just as much as Russia, China,
and Iran are endeavoring to change the global system, the US and its Lead From
Behind proxies are ferociously fighting to retain it, and this engenders a
serious escalation of geopolitical tensions that can appear to be largely
unpredictable to many. Nevertheless, while accounting for unexpected
developments that are always guaranteed to pop up, it’s still possible to
identify some of the most impactful international processes that are currently
reshaping the world and use them as the starting point for forecasting upcoming
events.
The exercise is
formatted whereby all of the Eurasian supercontinent is analyzed in five
separate chapters. The first part of each section begins by describing the
overall state of play there before pinpointing a couple key trends that have
defined the past year there. Afterwards, it then segues into a forecast about
where the aforementioned processes are headed and lists a few disruptions that
could occur to offset the course of events. Whenever possible, it also
highlights key geopolitical fault lines and hot spots that interested
individuals can monitor throughout the coming year.
CHAPTER ONE
Europe: State Of
Play
The homeland of
Western Civilization has seen its fair share of turbulence and destabilization
throughout the past year, largely owing to the large-scale and purposefully
intended geopolitical blowback of the US’ regime change operations in the Mideast.
The overwhelming “refugee” crisis has unbalanced the origin, transit, and
destination states, and in each instance, it works out to the US’ grand
strategic advantage. Concurrent with the internal weakening of Europe via the
ambitious demographic transformation that the US has been engineering over the
past year, American control over the continent was also promulgated via the
direct form of NATO expansionism. The establishment of NATO command centers in
the Baltics, Eastern Europe, and the Eastern Balkans were a move in entrenching
Washington’s supremacy over the EU. So as to safeguard its full-spectrum
hegemony for decades into the future, the US also made progress in pushing
forward the TTIP, a coercive ‘economic governance’ tool designed to prevent Brussels
from ever negotiating any independent trade agreements outside of Washington’s
explicit purview. In more ways than one, 2015 can be described as the year that
the US made one of its strongest power plays against Europe ever since the end
of World War II.
The “Refugee”
Crisis:
This US-designed
and Turkish-assisted operation aims to demographically plant the seeds for
long-term identity conflict in key EU states, most of all Germany, so that
Color Revolution-like social conditions can be manufactured upon demand as a
form of ‘bottom-up’ pressure against any forthcoming uncompliant
administrations. Along the way, the disruption that this created in the Balkans
upset the social and political equilibrium (already tenuous as it was) in
Serbia and the Republic of Macedonia, thus furthering the chaotic conditions
under which American influence is best promoted.
Schengen
Shutdown:
In a surprising
about-face, Germany, the EU’s most fervent guardian of the organization’s
supposedly ‘cherished’ principles, essentially dismantled the Schengen Zone in
one swift move when it re-established ‘temporary’ border checkpoints with
Austria. This was a direct repercussion of the “refugee” crisis and served to
demonstrate the enormous pressure that it had placed on the EU if even its most
staunch advocate and de-facto leader would be compelled to retreat somewhat
from part of its long-standing ideological convictions.
Hyper Liberalism
Is On The Run:
All told,
Germany’s relative backtracking from hyper-liberal policies set the stage for
its affiliated ideological adherents to do so as well. Sweden reintroduced
border checks and said it would no longer follow its blanket-acceptance policy
for “refugees”, while Denmark went as far as order the confiscation of money
and valuables from “refugees” as compensation for their taxpayer-provided
accommodation in the country. Tellingly, there’s no denying at this point that
hyper liberalism is on the run and that EU-member states are generally
tempering their previously blind conviction to such radical ideals.
Anti-Establishmentarianism
Grows:
Growing elements
of the public in some of the most key EU states are becoming increasingly
disenchanted with their leaders and the former manner of handling affairs. This
in turn has supported the rise of anti-establishment parties and voices all
across Europe, with Le Pen’s National Front being the most recent posterchild.
Syriza had the potential for manifesting such strongly held sentiment in
Greece, but it discouragingly proved itself to be an alternative (albeit
electorally exciting and rhetorically innovative) form of conventional
establishment politics, showing that such movements can successfully be
hijacked. The anti-establishment fraud of Viktor Orban is an excellent case in
point as well.
Russophobia Is
Revived In Full:
Ironically, while
some Western, Southern, and Central Europeans are pushing back against the EU
establishment (whether sincere in these efforts or fraudulently doing so like
Orban and Syriza), their Eastern European and Eastern Balkan counterparts have
fully embraced the historical hate of Russophobia and are actually playing a
vanguard role in lobbying the rest of the establishment to follow their lead.
Nowhere is this more evident than in US-occupied Ukraine, the Baltics, and
Romania, but it’s also powerfully felt in Poland as well. Finland and Sweden
have jumped on the bandwagon as of late, too, although they’re slightly (key
word) less obsessive than their peers.
Europe: Where
It’s Headed
Broadly speaking,
Europe is becoming even less independent than it’s ever been before. Internal
divisions between the elite and the electorate, and “Old Europe” and “New
Europe” are evident in all ways, and it’s clear that the continent is undergoing
a systemic transformation. The institutional (normative, political, economic,
etc.) monopoly that Germany used to have over its subordinates is now lessening
to a degree, and this is creating opportunities for other aspiring leaders to
assert themselves in their respective historical spheres. The consequence of
this process is the fulfillment of the Intermarum project of dividing Europe
from Russia by means of a contiguous belt of Russophobic and German-skeptic
states stretching from Sweden to Romania, and considering recent developments,
one can even include Turkey into this geopolitical construction. The Intermarum
has already succeeded in cancelling South Stream and suspending Balkan Stream,
and it’s thus predicted to strike at the third and last large-scale prospective
energy project that remains, and that’s Nord Stream II. Poland, now equally
Russophobic and German-skeptic under the PiS leadership, is leading the
Intermarum’s charge against this pipeline, and while it’s uncertain whether or
not they’ll full succeed, it’s already self-evident that it’s created a
polarizing problem that is turning anti-Russian “New Europe” even further away
from their “Older” peers.
The “New
Europe”-“Old Europe” Divide Widens:
For the reasons
explained above, the Intermarum members of the EU will continue moving
progressively further away from Germany and Western Europe. Normatively
speaking, they will publicly espouse of a form of “conservatism” that stands at
odds with “Old Europe’s” traditional liberalism, and the attractive appeal that
this has will pressure the latter to continue moderating its policies so as to
ideologically compete in this changing ‘values-based’ environment (which
includes promotion of the Russophobic “value” as well).
France Splits From
Germany:
Paris has largely
been seen as the junior partner to Berlin for quite a few years already, but
that’s all beginning to change nowadays. While Germany will clumsily try to
‘balance’ between progressive and so-called ‘conservative’ ‘values’ and
embarrassingly fail in doing so, France will bunker down in support of the
liberal rhetoric that normatively endears it to the general public in the PIGS
states of Southern Europe. France wants to carve out its own sphere of
influence along the Mediterranean, but this of course isn’t anything new in
fact.
What’s changing,
however, is that France is differentiating itself from Germany in rhetorical,
economic, and military manners, with the latter evidenced by its enthusiastic
role in the Wars on Libya and Syria. Paris’ recent moves against Syria are the
reason why Berlin felt compelled to up its aggression there as well and play
catch-up, in probably the first-ever observable instance in a very long time of
Germany undoubtedly following France’s lead. Although far-sighted as of now,
there is of course the potential for this to create an intra-EU division
between the bloc’s two leaders that would hamper its already-derailed
efficiency and inadvertently facilitate the continued rise of the Intermarum.
The Underbelly
Bursts:
The Balkans are
under tremendous and unprecedented pressure as a result of the “refugee” crisis
and the chain reaction of distrust that this unleashed between most of its
regional states. The only two that are not presently in some sort of spat with
one another are Serbia and the Republic of Macedonia, the geo-critical members
of the Central Balkans that incidentally are the key transit points for China’s
Balkan Silk Road project. They are, however, exceptionally vulnerable to internal
destabilizations within their borders, brought about by a combination of Color
Revolution technology, “refugees”, and Islamic-affiliated terrorism (most
likely practiced by the Albanian ethnicity). Macedonia’s upcoming early
elections at the end of April 2016 present a perfect scenario for reheating the
frozen Hybrid War attempt from last May via a renewed Color Revolution/Albanian
Unconventional War combination.
Montenegro’s
people are also presently struggling to free themselves from Djukanovic’s yoke,
urgently realizing that the longer they reside under his decades-long rule, the
more their traditional spiritual and geopolitical identity is being eroded. The
protest movement in this country could potentially escalate into a civil war if
excessive state brutality continues to be used. It’s not for sure that this
will happen, but it can’t of course be discounted. Montenegrins know that they
absolutely must act before their country formally joins NATO in order to
preserve their Orthodox Christianity and historically fraternal ties with
Russia, while similarly the ruling clique understands how imperative it is for
them to make sure NATO membership happens so as to destroy these two forms of
national identity. The friction between the two could realistically give way to
all-out conflict between both parties, ergo the fears of civil war.
Finally, Bosnia
is being pushed into an unbearable domestic crisis, with Sarajevo obsessively
doing whatever it can to infringe on Republika Srpska’s sovereignty. The
country is currently in its worst crisis since the end of the 1994 civil war,
as the Serbian representatives proudly cut ties with SIPA, the nation-wide
court and prosecution organ, in protest after the latest blatant infringement
against their entity’s sovereignty. The US is pushing the country back to the
brink of warfare, seeing the incitement of regional violence as dually
accomplishing the goals of sabotaging China’s Balkan Silk Road project through
the enticement of Serbian involvement and the resultant geopolitical
consequences this will entail and weakening the EU via an explosion of conflict
and a renewed humanitarian crisis. As with the previous forecasts, it’s not for
sure that this will fully transpire as feared, but the signs are undoubtedly there
that this is a trend that should surely be monitored in the coming months. In
all three instances, the use of terrorism could be strategically applied in
order to set off a domino chain of destabilization.
Europe:
Disruptors
The following are
three events that could change the game in Europe:
Belarussian
Backstabbing:
Lukashenko has
been cozying up quite close to the West over the past year, having gained
enough of their approval to even have some of the sanctions suspended against
his country. It’s not known whether there’s a link between the two, but it was
also around that time that Belarus began fussing about the air base that Russia
had purportedly wanted to open up there. While Moscow publicly appears unmoved
by the stalemate, it’s bound to have resulted in the Kremlin reconceptualizing
the nature of relations that it has with its nominal “ally”. The West wants
nothing more than to drive a wedge between the two and Russia is fully aware of
this, hence why it doesn’t publicly respond to Lukashenko’s ego-tripping
outreaches to Europe, but it’s possible that the Belarussian leader might
overstep his position one day and disastrously himself in a situation where the
West prompts him to choose sides. Predictably, he may let his ambitions of personal
glory get the best of him and opt to join forces with the West if the economic
price is right, and doing so would completely disrupt Russia’s post-Soviet
integrational projects with the Eurasian Union and the CSTO.
Ukrainian
Uprising 2.0:
First written
about in August, the author still holds true to the thesis that Ukraine is
progressively becoming more susceptible to a legitimate people’s revolution
against the Kievan authorities. Whether it’s of Neo-Nazis turning on their
former patrons, the country’s disparate regions pushing for federalization, or
average citizens that have just plain had enough of the economic and physical
destruction of the past two years, it’s more likely than ever that some sort of
domestic disruption aside from a renewed civil war against Donbass (which is
also a possibility) could occur. No matter which form it takes, this would
instantly become Europe’s number one foreign affairs priority and would
temporarily reorient (or rather, disorient) attention from the Mideast back to
Eastern Europe. The effects that this would have on the New Cold War are
dependent on the circumstances under which this event transpires, so if it’s a
civil war against Donbass, it would be to Russia’s disadvantage, but if it was
a patriotic rebellion against the Western-controlled government, then it would
play to Russia’s benefit.
Croatian-Serbian
Conflict:
The last
disruption that might (but does not necessarily mean it will) happen would be a
Croatian-Serbian War provoked by a breakdown of stability in Bosnia and
exacerbated by both sides’ current missile race. For the moment, this isn’t
doesn’t seem to be a likelihood for 2016, but the odds could turn against this
forecast’s favor if unexpected developments (i.e. Western-supported terrorist
attacks) break out in the country and quickly unravel the peace between all
parties. A domestic destabilization in Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro, and/or the
Republic of Macedonia (separately or in some sort of combination) would be
unsettling enough for the EU and would already greatly undermine whatever
remaining independence (mostly in name only at this point) it retains, but a
conventional state-on-state conflict between two Balkan nations would maximize
the respective effects even more.
***
CHAPTER TWO
Eurasia: State Of
Play
In this context,
Eurasia refers to the former Soviet space and concerns Russia’s reintegration
efforts over this wide region. Belarus and Ukraine were already mentioned in
the previous section, so this one speaks on the Russian Federation itself, the
Caucasus, and Central Asia. Overall, one can see that Moscow has successfully
consolidated its position, although two significant holdouts refuse to enter
into pragmatic cooperation with it. These are Georgia and Uzbekistan, with the
latter engaging with Russia through the SCO but not at all in the formerly
close nature that it once did when it was part of the CSTO. These two states
are the US’ ideal points of strategic entry in their respective regions, and
more progress has been made on this front with Tbilisi than Tashkent. Other
than the competing institutionalism between the Eurasian Union and EU in the
Caucasus and Uzbekistan’s stubbornly ‘independent’ position, things in general
have been very positive for Russia. The Pivot to Asia is proceeding apace,
although of course this is a long-term strategic complementary diversification
to Russia’s foreign policy and will take a lot more than a single year or two
to physically actualize. That said, the commencement of the first-ever Eastern
Economic Forum in Vladivostok was a welcome sign, and Russia looks to be
advancing towards the fulfillment of the “Asian Sea Arc” project in enhancing
maritime trade with ASEAN.
Eurasian Union
Enlargement:
2015 was
important for the Eurasian Union because it saw the formal incorporation of
Armenia and Kyrgyzstan into the economic bloc. This gave the group a presence
in the South Caucasus and expanded its position along the Chinese border, along
with bequeathing it with the institutional experience necessary for managing
future enlargements. The fact that both of these cases proved to be a success
without any notable problems or bottlenecks demonstrates that the Eurasian
Union is working effectively at its highest levels.
Tbilisi’s
Intransigence:
Armenia is
formally a member of the Eurasian Union and CSTO and rival Azerbaijan has been
moving a lot closer to Russia over the past year, but Tbilisi has yet to
improve its ties with Moscow. President Putin said during his yearly press
conference recently that he’s ready to move forward with this process, provided
that his Georgian counterparts seize the moment and move forward with him, but
despite formally agreeing to his visa-abolishment proposal, they seem unwilling
to moderate their pro-NATO stance. Earlier this year, the military bloc even
opened up a joint training base in the country, demonstrating the extent of
influence that Brussels has over Tbilisi at the moment. When speaking of
Brussels, that can be taken in more ways than one, since Georgia still wants to
join the EU, which has the distinct possibility of creating a customs crisis in
the Caucasus in the future.
CSTO/SCO Security
Interplay In Central Asia:
Both
integrational organizations rehearsed their contingency planning for dealing
with a breakout of terrorist violence in Central Asia. ISIL’s expansion to
Afghanistan and the Taliban’s latest propensity for renewed offensives raises
the risk of chaos spilling across the borders and into the former Soviet periphery.
Thankfully, as The Saker noted in his detailed piece from May, Russia has
hardened her southern border and is prepared for dealing with most conventional
scenarios that could transpire. China’s involvement vis-à-vis the SCO is
important as well, since Beijing has enormous energy and forthcoming market
interests there that it is eager to have defended.
The Caspian Takes
Central Stage:
Complementing
Russia’s anti-terrorist intervention in Syria, the Caspian Flotilla has played
a very strategic and supportive role, one which transcends its
counter-terrorist success and sends larger statements to the rest of the world.
Russia is signaling that the inland lake, previously written off by Western
military ‘experts’ as near-useless in the modern-era, is actually quite an
advantageous position for launching operations in the Mideast and potentially
even Central Asia. The munitions that were used surprised and the accuracy with
which they were fired surprised Western observers and proved just how wrong they
were in earlier harking on about Russia’s ‘decrepit’ naval resources.
The Pacific
Pivot:
Russia has
resolutely shifted a large amount of its formerly European-concentrated
attention towards entering into tighter relations with the Pacific economies,
specifically in ASEAN. Working with China is wonderful, but by itself it cannot
function as a full-on pivot unless diversified to other partners as well.
Vietnam forms the lynchpin of Russia’s ASEAN strategy, but even this could be
endangered due to its partner’s cooperation with the US-led TPP. Be that as it
may, Russia has clearly demonstrated its intent to engage the Pacific states
and re-establish a mild presence in the region, be it in the diplomatic,
military, and/or economic senses.
Eurasia: Where
It’s Headed
The present
security configuration in Central Asia is disproportionately dependent on the
continued and stable rule of the countries’ leaders, but with transitions being
inevitable sooner or later due to the advanced age of the various Presidents,
it’s possible that everything Russia has worked for could become undermined if
this changing of the guard descends into a bloody inter-factional battle. This
isn’t so much a risk in Kazakhstan, and one could even perhaps say in
Tajikistan (which has the memory of a recent civil war behind it), so much as
it is in Uzbekistan, where the clan-based nature of society is prime for
external manipulation. There are only two ways in which power transfers can
take place in these three states, and that’s through de-facto ‘succession’ (the
predecessor appoints a political heir before passing and/or stepping down)
and/or a Color Revolution, both of which could intertwine once a ‘successor’s’
legitimacy is put to vote afterwards. These destabilization scenarios could
occur at any time, not just next year, but because they the situational trip
wire might be broached with one of the elderly statesmen’s passing, it’s worthy
to have offered those view words about the possibility.
The
Russian-Iranian Strategic Partnership Integrates Azerbaijan:
Long seen as the
West’s prized partner in the Caspian, 2015 saw a remarkable cooling of
Azeri-Western relations over the latter’s strong criticism of Baku’s human
rights record. While political and non-energy economic ties (e.g. EU
membership) appear to be at a standstill, oil and gas still flow unimpeded
through its territory, and Azerbaijan is expected to be the main source for the
EU’s anti-Russian Southern Energy Corridor. Interestingly enough, Azerbaijan
has moved considerably closer to both Russia and Iran in the past year,
excitedly raising the prospects that a trilateral partnership between the three
(perhaps via the North-South Corridor) could neutralize the unipolar intentions
of the US and EU and flip Baku into a becoming a multipolar pump of energy
influence towards the West. Of course, the US would never allow Azerbaijan to
become a strategic weapon against it, Turkey, or Israel’s interests (the latter
of which receives 40% of its oil needs from the country) without some sort of
Color Revolution disruption first, so as this realignment scenario moves
forward, one can simultaneously expect more Western hostility towards
Azerbaijan and friendly outreaches towards Armenia.
Barbarians At The
Turkmen Gates:
The author wrote
a prognosis in summer 2014 about the institutional vulnerability that
Turkmenistan has towards any ISIL-like offensive streaming across its joint
border with Afghanistan, and the assessment is still very relevant going into
2016 (and it could also affect Uzbekistan and Tajikistan too, especially if
they’re in the midst of their own domestic crises at the time). Just in October
there was an incident with the Taliban being caught in no-man’s land along the
Turkmen border, and as the terrorist group regroups for what seems to be an
imminent series of offensives earlier next year, it’s likely that their
presence will only increase along the shared frontier. Any spillover of
terrorist bedlam into Turkmen territory could quickly lead to a spike in global
energy prices, principally because the world’s second-largest gas field in
Galkynysh is very close to Afghanistan and could be affected by the turmoil.
Even if the terrorists don’t occupy or destroy any of its facilities, but
simply make a move in that direction, it’s predictable that gas prices (and in
turn, perhaps even the oil prices to which they’re pegged) could increase,
since speculators might prepare for Beijing to commence the emergency purchase
of LNG to substitute for any forthcoming disruptions from its main foreign
energy supplier. Although the LNG sales would take time to finalize and
deliver, if a China made a large enough play in this market at a single,
concentrated time, then it would inevitably have an impact on price.
Russian-Japanese
Outreaches:
While it may seem
unlikely to many, there’s a strong chance that the two sides will engage in
behind-the-scenes diplomacy to pragmatically rectify their outstanding
bilateral issues (if they haven’t begun such talks already). Shinzo Abe is
indisputably a pro-American stooge that’s currently overseeing one of the US’
most cherished Lead From Behind proxies, but there are still apolitical
non-governmental interests that are eager to intensify ties between the two.
Russia’s Pivot to Asia needs foreign investment and management experience in
order to be fully successful, hence the reason why Vladivostok and the nearby
environs were recently declared a free port in order to assist with this. It’s
not to suggest that a breakthrough needs to be reached on the Kuril Islands
issue in order for this to happen either, as the only thing that needs to occur
is for the profit-minded business elite in Japan to successfully lobby their
government backtrack on their unreasonable anti-Russian policies out of
economic motivations, convincing them that there is more self-interested gain
in working with Russia than working against it.
From the Russian
perspective, aside from the Far Eastern foreign investment interests that it
has, Moscow would like to strategically and pragmatically diversify its Asian
Pivot beyond China and to the Pacific’s third-largest economy, Japan.
Additionally, some in the Russian establishment conceivably hope that progress
could be made in exporting the country’s resources to the energy-deprived
island chain. On a grander level, the Russian-Chinese Strategic Partnership
tacitly implies that both sides can cooperate with the other’s rivals (in this
case, Russia working with Japan just as it does with Vietnam and India) out of
the shared vision of using its newfound position to promote its partner’s
interests wherever possible. This policy doesn’t always work as theorized and
isn’t infallible, but the general concept is that each of the two trusts the
other enough so as not to be perturbed by their external dealings and to never
suspect treacherous intentions from them. If anything, such interactions can
boost the cohesiveness of the Russian-Chinese Strategic Partnership, but this
is only because of the unique nature of their bilateral relations. The same
template, for example, can’t be superimposed on Russian-Belarussian relations,
as was earlier discussed.
Eurasia:
Disruptors
Other than the
Hybrid War regime chance scenarios touched upon earlier, here are several ways
in which the ongoing trends in Eurasia could severely be disrupted:
Nagorno-Karabakh
Continuation War:
This was
previously elaborated upon by the author before, but it still remains an
ever-present possibility. The specifics of a 2016 scenario would probably be a
bit modified than what was earlier written, making due for the changed
geopolitical position of both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Russia’s Eurasian Union
and CSTO ally is moving towards the West at the same time that the West’s
energy-exporting bastion is looking towards Russia and Iran. While Azerbaijan
routinely threatens Armenia and continuously boasts about its military
potential, it realistically doesn’t seem inclined to provoke Russia, which has
a contingent of troops based there. It’s possible that a second hurrah of
Western influence and/or false-flag provocations could be used to lure Baku
into this anti-Russian trap, but it’s more feasible that a second round of
Color Revolution fervor would hit Armenia and destabilize its government. In
the event that it falls to Ukrainian-style hard-core nationalists, then the
presumably pro-Western authorities that would take their place could likely
initiate the catastrophic scenario on their own, thereby opening up a new
anti-Russian hot front in the New Cold War and potentially turning Moscow and
Baku against one another.
Uzbekistan Goes
Full-On Rogue:
Islam Karimov has
been somewhat courting President Putin’s approval over the past year, trying to
convince him that Uzbekistan isn’t going to totally turn against Russian
interests and actively disrupt them in the region. The Russian leader visited
the Central Asian state in December 2014 and wrote off some of its debt, and he
even invited Karimov to visit Russia after the two met in Ufa over the recent
summer. Still, these friendly and welcome outreaches don’t change the fact that
Uzbekistan is looking to warm up its military relations with the US and
potentially becomes its Lead From Behind partner in the region in exchange.
Uzbekistan might even be under some form of implicit blackmail, getting the
hint that failure to work with the US would guarantee that a Hybrid War
scenario breaks out after Karimov’s passing. Whatever the reason may be,
there’s plenty of reason to suspect that Uzbekistan could one day play a
similarly anti-Russian position as its unipolar Ukrainian and Turkish
counterparts presently do.
Japanese-Russian
Naval Tensions:
Disturbingly, it
appears as though the world has entered a renewed era of naval tensions, with
the East China Sea, South China Sea, and Turkey’s foreboding potential in the
Bosporus being the prime examples. In a similar vein, it’s possible for the US
to command its Japanese satellite to enact a comparable provocation against
Russia just as it does against China at the moment. It’s not guaranteed that
Japan would fall for this bait, but Abe might be tempted to go along with this
in order to create the ‘convincing’ justification that Japan needs to
unreservedly and immediately revise its pacifist constitution. Staging some
kind of stunt in the Kuril Islands would create the global fanfare necessary to
ride the anti-Russian wave into general international (Western) acceptance of
his actions, and it might even be enough to scare the Japanese population into
largely accepting his dictates on this matter. The media-manipulated and
absolutely false perception of Russia and China ‘teaming up’ against Japan
would also excite American military planners into beefing up their presence in
archipelago on the fabricated grounds of ‘protecting an Asian democracy’.
***
CHAPTER THREE
Mideast: State Of
Play
The latest year
was one of the most historically transformational for the region ever since the
2003 US War on Iraq, with the argument perhaps being made that 2015 was even
more impactful because it heralded Russia’s long-awaited return to the Mideast
and the formal (key word) end of the US- and Israel-manufactured Iranian
nuclear ‘scare’. There’s no debating that the entire regional paradigm was
turned upside down by these two developments, and the author’s earlier analysis
about “The New Middle East: Russian Style” goes in-depth by explaining what’s
changed and what it will likely lead to. Therefore, this section is mostly a
reiteration of that research, albeit partially modified for the specifics of
the 2016 Trends Forecast. Other than these two globally renowned events whose
impact doesn’t require any further explanation beyond the afore-cited link,
there were three other developments that marked the key Mideast processes of
2015:
The War On Yemen:
Saudi Arabia fell
into a tantalizing trap after it decided to invade its poorer and comparatively
weaker neighbor to the south. The Ansarallah had been waging a liberation
struggle against the pro-Western and Saudi-imposed proxy that was controlling
the country, but the Saudi establishment fell for their own prejudices and
sincerely thought that this was some sort of covert Iranian conspiracy against
their interests. That definitely wasn’t the case whatsoever, but the fact
remains that this paranoid fear is what prompted the Kingdom to enter into what
could indisputably be labeled as a quagmire right now. In the over 9 months
since their bombing campaign and invasion started, Saudi Arabia and its
contracted GCC allies and other mercenary partners have not been able to
achieve their main objective of defeating the Ansarallah and regaining total
control over the country. In response, the Saudis felt pressed to further
internationalize the War on Yemen under the pretext that it’s a subsect of the
larger “War on Terror”, hence the recent creation of the Riyadh-led
“anti-terrorist coalition” (examined in-depth by the author here). Going into
the new year, there’s no concrete indication yet of whether or not this will
change the Saudis’ disastrous fortunes and be enough to turn the tide of the
war to their favor, although it will likely fulfill some role in trying to do
so.
Kurdistan
Calling:
Having been
predicted years ago and previously with much Western backing (although now with
possible Russian-Iranian support as well), it now looks like the time has come
for “Kurdistan” to take on a heightened international role (even if
sub-national and spread across Syria-Turkey-Iraq). The Iraqi Peshmerga and
Syrian-based Kurdish militias have been very successful in fighting against
ISIL, and this has won them international approval from all forces except
Turkey, which is fearful that this sizeable minority group (estimated to be
around a quarter of the country’s population) may rebel against Ankara once
more for increased rights, representation, and perhaps even autonomy or
independence. It was this fear, combined with Erdogan’s catastrophic
electioneering efforts, that led to Turkey provoking the Kurds into restarting
their military operations against the state, all with the intent of sparking a
preplanned offensive to cripple that ethnic community. The resultant Turkish
Civil War that followed and Erdogan’s divisive efforts to split the
transnational community by buying out their Iraqi counterparts will obviously
be major factors in determining the legal status of transnational “Kurdistan”
in the coming future.
Turkey Backstabs
Russia:
One of the most
dramatic events to happen ever since the end of the Old Cold War occurred when
Turkey shockingly shot down a Russian anti-terrorist bomber over Syria. This
unparalleled aggression was especially jaw-dropping given that the two sides,
despite their disagreements over Syria, were steadily moving towards a pragmatic
partnership with one another. In the aftermath that followed, Russia maturely
resisted the legitimate urge for war that it had and patiently set about
planning the long-term destabilization of Erdogan’s government, with travel and
trade sanctions being but the first counter-salvo in what is expected to become
a protracted proxy struggle between both sides. The US ultimately benefits from
this, but curiously enough, it also seems inclined to passively turn a blind
eye to what Russia might be planning against Turkey, with the afore-cited link
providing more details about this interesting development.
Mideast: Where
It’s Headed
The Mideast will
continue its geopolitical transformation in the coming year, with ongoing
events helping to reshape its overall contours. This next year will be but one
in a series of several coming more that will determine what will then be the
lasting status of the Mideast. This transitional time is turbulent and racked
with violence, and it can be said to have begun in earnest in 2014 with the
rise of ISIL. It’s not known exactly when this period will end, but the region
could realistically stabilize by 2018 or 2019, depending of course on whether
or not key pillars (Turkey and Saudi Arabia) implode, which in that case could indefinitely
prolong this history-making era.
Reaching A Syrian
Settlement:
The dynamic
interplay of various global forces that have converged over Syria is totally
unparalleled in recent history but also completely untenable in its present
form. There are now three coalitions nominally fighting terrorism in Syria
(with only the Russian one being sincere in its stated objective, while the US-
and Saudi-led ones actually support terrorism) and a slew of foreign aircraft
flying over its skies. The accelerated diplomacy that’s been happening as of
late indicates that all sides want to see some sort of settlement soon, likely
agreed to by the middle of next year, in order to de-escalate and pull back
from the brink of all-out conflict. Each side will probably resort to
non-conventional means to support their given side(s) after the conventional
de-escalation begins, meaning that any possible surface indication of a
settlement might be illusory and misleading. Nonetheless, it seems like an
agreement between most of the Great Powers currently involved in the war in one
capacity or another will come sooner or later, and it’s very probable that 2016
will be the year they finally hammer the details out.
It’s impossible
at this moment to fully articulate a post-conflict vision for Syria since so
much is dependent on the Race for Raqqa. The respective coalition that gains
control over ISIL’s ‘capital’ will have a deciding voice in stipulating the
constitutional direction of the country afterwards, and with that document’s
legal revision being a central element of the UNSC’s conflict resolution
efforts, it means that control over this city will be pivotal. The US would
ideally like to create a transnational sub-state “Sunnistan” (likely through a
‘federal’ model) between eastern Syria and western Iraq in order to revive the
Qatar-Turkey gas pipeline that had originally been at the root of the war in
the first place, while Russia and Syria want to preserve the unity of the
state. It’s appropriate at this moment to remind the reader that Turkey’s
recent invasion of northern Iraq was likely meant to further the goal of a
“Sunnistan” in that theater in anticipation of a complementary unit being
constructed in Syria.
Turkish Turmoil:
The author has
written about this on many occasions before, but the gist is that Turkey is
leaping towards an all-out domestic crisis as anti-government sentiment spikes
and the Civil War wages on. With Russia now opposed to Erdogan’s government,
it’s likely that it will take some moves to increase the level of domestic
dissent against the authorities (e.g. sanctions and potential gas disruptions),
but it must be reminded that Turkey’s present turmoil is all Erdogan’s fault. A
dangerous cocktail of destabilization is now brewing inside the country, and
it’s very probable that the civil war could spill over out of the southeast and
into the heartland and/or coastal areas. It doesn’t even have to be
Kurdish-inspired in this case, as if the legitimate institutional opposition
continues to feel oppressed to the strong degree that they presently do, some
of their members might peacefully organize against the government. If the state
brutally crushes their demonstrations (which is all but guaranteed), some of
the protesters might resort to taking up arms against the government, with a
few possibly linking up with radical left-wing militants in the process. As
violence spreads across the land, Erdogan might feel compelled to enact a
wide-ranging martial law decree, but doing so would also place the military in
a heightened position to enact a coup against him if they were both inclined to
do so and physically capable of it (after Erdogan ‘cut their wings’ in the
past). It doesn’t look like things will calm down anytime soon in Turkey, and
even if they appear to do so, there’s a definite level of intense discontent
lying just below the surface that could be reactivated at any time.
The Saudis’
Sinking Ship:
The Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia has never been in such dire straits before. The country is
embroiled in an unnecessary, bloody, and ever-expanding quagmire in Yemen, and
its own borders are now being threatened by the blowback overspill that it
unintentionally engendered. The Saudis can’t even fight the war they started on
their own and have been pressed into assembling an “anti-terrorist” coalition
(in reality a ‘legitimated’ and integrated mercenary marketplace) to provide
the necessary backup support that its forces need to sustain their aggression.
Concurrent with this, falling energy prices have forced the Kingdom into its
largest-ever deficit that raises serious questions about the potential for
social unrest in the future. Along with that, there’s also the prospect of a
broad Shiite uprising in the Eastern Province if the Kingdom’s authorities
continue to blatantly disregard that minority’s basic human rights and
interests. All told, the Saudi ship appears to be sinking, but it doesn’t mean
that its problems can’t theoretically be patched up. As difficult as it might
be, they may find a way to avert what looks to be a looming disaster, although
at present it’s unknown exactly how they could realistically do this (but they
never tire the world with their ‘surprises’). Therefore, the Saudis’ forecast
for 2016 is unusually grim, and it’s predicted that one or more of the
aforementioned destabilizing factors will contribute to a larger systemic
crisis inside the country, perhaps culminating in a royal and/or military coup
attempt (whether or not it succeeds is another matter).
Mideast: Disruptors
The Saudis Win
The War On Yemen:
This does not
seem all that possible at this given point, but if the Saudi’s “anti-terrorist”
coalition is somehow able to provide the necessary personnel and firepower
support that Riyadh so desperately needs, then it’s conceivable that it might
irreversibly change the balance of power there and lead to a full-out ethnic
cleansing campaign against Shiites and northern-based Yemenis. That’s probably
the only way that the Saudis could ever secure their ‘win’ over Yemen, and they
know they can only do it if they have multilateral support and partners in
crime. Doing it by themselves, which they’re theoretically capable of it, isn’t
something that they want to do primarily since they want to forge a ‘blood
bond’ between their mercenary forces in committing them to further anti-Shiite
genocidal campaigns afterwards. A Saudi ‘win’ in the War on Yemen would be a
loss for the multipolar world and would immediately raise the chances that the
“anti-terrorist” coalition is redirected northwards against Syria and Iraq with
full force. These two targets might see some low-scale, light-intensity
engagements prior to this, but the real nightmare would occur after the
‘problem’ in Yemen is ‘dealt with’ according to the Saudis’ vile designs.
Omani Sultan
Qaboos Passes Away:
The leader of
Oman, the most pragmatic and non-radical member of the GCC, has been sick for
years and is already of advanced age. He will eventually pass away, whether
it’s next year or sometime afterwards, but there’s no apparent heir or
elaborated successionist process for what will come next. The author wrote
about the possible scenarios in an earlier piece for The Saker, but to
concisely summarize, one of three possibilities will happen – succession will
occur unimpeded and Oman will remain a pro-Saudi (albeit pragmatic) kingdom;
the Muslim Brotherhood attempts to sabotage the leadership transition; or
Islamic Republicanism (in the vein of the Iranian manifestation) takes hold
among the populace and becomes a rallying cry for change. The latter two events
would likely result in some form of a Saudi military intervention, whether
unilaterally or through the “anti-terrorist” coalition (minus the Muslim
Brotherhood-supporting states of Qatar and Turkey). This is a whole new can of
worms that the Saudis definitely do not want to deal with at the moment, and it
could be the decisive straw that breaks the camel’s back. On the other hand, if
a rabidly pro-Saudi ruler comes to power in Qaboos’ wake, it’s possible that he
may reorient the Kingdom’s foreign policy away from its pragmatic base and more
towards the unipolar subservient status of his royal peers, which would thus
have direct consequences for bilateral ties with Iran (including in the energy
sphere).
Muslim
Brotherhood-Wahhabist Fallout 2.0:
Most of 2014 was
marked by a the Gulf Cold War between Saudi Arabia and Qatar that was finally
ended when the latter strategically surrendered to Riyadh and was forced to
kick the Muslim Brotherhood out to Turkey. Since then, however, and with Saudi
Arabia’s relative weakening over the past year, Qatar has moved so close with
Turkey (the new formal patron of the terrorist movement) that it’s going to
host a military base for Erdogan in the coming future. This is obviously aimed
at making sure that the US doesn’t ever sell Qatar out to Saudi Arabia in
whatever forthcoming Mideast realignment it may be planning, so Emir Thani is
trying to proactively secure his survival in the face of changing American
strategic priorities. Remarkably, both Turkey and Qatar are part of Saudi
Arabia’s “anti-terrorist” coalition, but sooner or later, it’s all but certain
that the two ideological strands of competing Islamic terrorism will come to
blows again, perhaps in the abovementioned Omani scenario. No matter how it
eventually plays out, the stakes are a lot higher now than they were in 2014,
since Qatar is now aligned with Turkey, which foolishly doesn’t understand when
it’s necessary to back away from a flawed policy (the aggression against Russia
being the premier case in point). Erdogan’s arrogance would play out to the
advantage of the multipolar world, however, since a Turkish-Saudi conflict
(whether physical or played out via a region-wide Cold War) would further
weaken the US’ two pillars of regional support and create unprecedented
opportunities for the Resistance Bloc. It might even speed up one or both of
their internal disintegrations if the scenarios proceed along a certain
trajectory.
***
CHAPTER FOUR
South Asia: State
Of Play
The situation in
South Asia has changed dramatically over the past year, although most people
likely have been oblivious to this owing to the relative lack of global news
coverage that all but the most dramatic events receive. Mostly everyone is
aware of the Taliban and its steady advances in the Afghan countryside, as are
they knowledgeable about India and Pakistan’s ascension to the SCO, but
comparatively less people heard about the Indian-Chinese Cold War that’s
progressively unfolded throughout 2015 or about the heated proxy rivalry
between the two over Nepal. These interconnected events are very important, yet
they regretfully didn’t receive the widespread exposure that they deserve.
Along the same vein, Bangladesh’s rising Islamic terrorist problem has also
been swept under the rug, despite clear indications that it is turning into
ISIL’s latest frontline state.
When assessing
the year in review as it relates to South Asia, one mustn’t also forget to
speak about the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, perhaps one of the most
critical spokes of the New Silk Road, nor must the stunning pro-Western
electoral reversal in Sri Lanka go undescribed either. The Hybrid War threat in
the Maldives only made the news because the island chain is a popular and elite
tourist getaway, but aside from that, most people would never have heard about
developments in this geostrategic Indian Ocean state. Last but not least, the
long-held dream of constructing a pipeline from Turkmenistan to India (what
some have suggested was partially behind the US’ decision to occupy
Afghanistan) finally moved forward for the first time in its history with the
project’s official consecration in early December.
It’s worthwhile
to shed some additional light on these neglected geopolitical developments in
order to educate the reader about their existence and significance, and also to
set the stage for explaining how they’ll impact on the region in the year to
come.
Taliban On The
March:
To refresh
everyone’s memory, the US and NATO severely decreased the size of their
occupation forces in Afghanistan at the end of 2014, meaning that 2015 was
bound to see an increase in Taliban activity one way or another. To clarify,
the West did not fully withdraw their forces, but merely reduced their presence
out of strategic considerations, but this was enough to embolden the terrorists
later on in the year. During the fall, the Taliban shocked the world by
temporarily capturing their first provincial capital since the 2001 invasion
ousted them from power. This dramatic event captured global attention and
proved that the Taliban was significantly more powerful (both in terms of
physical forces and intelligence networks) than was previously thought, and
their follow-up attacks all throughout the country at the end of December took
most experts off guard. After all, the Taliban previously ‘hibernated’ during
the winter, with the spring and summer being routinely identified as the
traditional ‘fighting season’, but it seems as though the group is switching up
its strategy so as to score unexpected battlefield ‘points’.
It’s
incontestable that the Taliban are in the process of undertaking a nationwide
offensive aimed at finally overthrowing the Kabul government, but this has significantly
destabilizing consequences for all of Afghanistan’s neighbors. As was discussed
in the earlier section about Eurasia, there’s the real risk of terrorist
violence spilling over into Central Asia, especially in the event that any of
the border countries experience their own separate forms of destabilization.
Likewise, the violence could also spill across into Pakistan, which has
traditionally felt the brunt of the Taliban’s wrath over the past decade. And,
making matters even more complicated, ISIL has finally established a presence
in the country and is lethally competing with the Taliban. It’s very probable
that if these two groups don’t cooperate (and even if they do so, it would be
under ISIL’s leadership, not the Taliban’s), then they’ll savagely be at each
other’s throats in a bloody terrorist civil war.
This could create
the opening needed for Afghanistan’s anti-terrorist forces to eliminate both
groups in one fell swoop, but unfortunately the national forces are largely
corrupted and trained to insufficient standards to take advantage of this
opportunity, and more than likely the two terrorist sides would fight to the
death with one another. If ISIL emerges victorious, then the territorial
expansionism that’s been trademarked by the group in Syria and Iraq will likely
become transplanted in the Afghan theater, raising the very real risk that that
a transnational ‘caliphate’ could emerge between Afghanistan and Central Asia
(perhaps making its first inroads in Turkmenistan and/or Tajikistan),
Afghanistan and Pakistan, or between all three regions in connecting
Tajikistan’s Gorno-Badakhstan, Afghanistan’s Wakkhan Corridor and nearby
environs, and Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. If the Taliban is really as
divided as some rumors speculate, then it’s possible that ISIL could gain the
upper hand against them in any prospective conflict and take steps to actualize
these transnational terrorist plans.
Pakistan And
India Join The SCO:
This was a huge
move and one that should likely reverberate for years to come. The two regional
nuclear-armed rivals began their ascension into the Russian- and Chinese-led
organization during the SCO Summit in Ufa back in July. On paper at least, this
was supposed to herald a new political-strategic order in Eurasia, with all of
the continent’s primary forces (save for the EU, of course) party to the group
in one capacity or another. It still remains to be seen whether the optimistic
assessments about the SCO will bear any major fruit, as the Indian-Chinese Cold
War (which will be described shortly) threatens to put all of that on hold for
the indefinite future except for select publicly presentable statements and
cooperative efforts (like multilateral humanitarian and social programs. On the
other hand, India and Pakistan’s joint ascension to the SCO may have played a
role in New Delhi trusting Islamabad enough to go forward with the TAPI
Pipeline project, which in and of itself is a very historic development.
TAPI:
This far-reaching
project has finally seen the light of day after its formal beginning at the
start of December. If everything goes according to plan (a big “if”, of
course), then the gas pipeline from the world’s second-largest field should go
online by 2019. TAPI’s saliency cannot be overstated, since not only would it
bring Turkmen gas on to the global market via LNG near Gwadar, but it would
also make India partially dependent on Pakistan’s goodwill in supplying its
partial energy demands. Never before have the two rivals agreed to cooperate so
closely, which of course harbors well for the future stability of the
subcontinent. Anything can come up between then and now, however, so it’s not a
guarantee that the project itself will be completed or that India and Pakistan
will enjoy the level of trust necessary to actualize their envisioned energy
plans, but the idea itself is unprecedented and certainly deserves mention in
this end-of-the-year review of South Asia.
The
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor:
One of the
largest economic announcements made in 2015 came from President Xi Jinping’s
proclamation that his country would be investing $46 billion in constructing
the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) between the two countries, thus
confirming China’s desire to fully integrate its decades-long Pakistani ally
into its New Silk Road dreams for the supercontinent. Importantly, the
successful completion of this project would not only add to the development of
Xinjiang (already the hub of Chinese-Central Asian trade and through which Chinese-Pakistan
trade would also pass), but it would de-facto give China an Indian Ocean
presence in the southern port of Gwadar. Strategically speaking, although being
a long-stretched overland detour, this would partially (but not fully) ease
China’s dependence on the US-controlled Strait of Malacca and increasingly
unipolar-crowded South China Sea, thus signaling that CPEC is of the highest
significance for Beijing. Somewhat for this reason, it can be expected that the
US will do its best to continue the destabilization of Pakistan, but in a way
so that the Indian-destined TAPI isn’t that negatively affected. Considering
these self-imposed situational constraints, it’s possible that the Province of
Balochistan (the location of Gwadar) might undergo a renewed period of unrest
sometime in the future.
The
Indian-Chinese Cold War:
In speaking about
unrest and destabilization, it’s timely to raise general awareness about the
Indian-Chinese Cold War. The author meticulously explored the details of this
South Asia-wide proxy rivalry in an earlier piece for Oriental Review, but the
overall idea is that the two Asian Supergiants are fiercely competing in Nepal,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives, and that while neither of them makes
this fact public, it’s impossible for objective observers to deny the existence
of their mutual geopolitical tension in these areas. Due to the rapidity in
which the competition spread (four countries over the course of only one year),
it’s logical to conclude that this state of strained relations will carry over
into at least the next couple of years, if not outright develop into a ‘formal’
Asian Cold War sometime in the future. The relevant article mentioned above has
information about the specifics of the how this power struggle has played out
in each of the aforementioned states.
Bangladesh
Turning Into Bangla-Daesh:
As was spoken
about in the lead-in, Bangladesh is quickly turning into a frontline state in
the War on Terror, with ISIL feverishly working to build a few nests within the
country. It’s relevant to note that Bangladesh is the world’s most densely
populated country and is overwhelmingly almost entirely Muslim, meaning that
not only could ISIL wrack absolute havoc with even the most ‘small-scale’
terrorist attack, but that there’s bound to be a statistically significant
percentage of the population that sympathizes with the group.
Even if this is
only 1% of them, in a country of over 150 million people, that’s still one and
a half million people, which is a wildly uncontrollable number of terrorist
supporters to have in general, let alone in the same country at the same time.
Bangladesh is critically located between India’s state of West Bengal and its
‘Seven Sisters’ in the Northeast (whose stability is a prerequisite for India’s
“Act East” towards ASEAN), thus translating into the country having a
unparalleled importance on India’s geostrategic security as well.
Any large-scale
terrorist chaos inside Bangladesh, not to mention if this produces a massive humanitarian
crisis and hundreds of thousands of refugees, would directly have a
destabilizing impact on these Indian territories, and thus, on India’s own
national security. The quirk here is that despite India being so vulnerable to
Bangladeshi-originated destabilization, it is almost powerless to directly
determine the course of events there and remains somewhat of a ‘geopolitical
hostage’ to whatever transpires. It goes without saying that this fact is
obviously understood by outside powers as well, and it can’t be precluded that
the US might seek to take advantage of it in order to increase the leverage
that it has over India in the future.
South Asia: Where
It’s Headed
The Asian Cold
War Heats Up:
India and China
are not expected to significantly improve their bilateral relations in the
coming year. Of course, they might make highly publicized statements of
rhetorical support for one another in one of the two major multilateral
organizations that they’re a part of (BRICS and the SCO), but bilaterally,
little will probable change between the two. Furthermore, the Cold War between
them isn’t going to go away on its own, and both sides are increasingly viewing
the other as an emerging security threat to their respective interests. The
Indians likely harbored this sentiment ever since their defeat in the 1962 war
with China, but it’s only this year that those feelings have returned front and
center for both camps. The way that the Indians see it, China is encroaching in
their traditional sphere of civilizational interests in South Asia (Nepal,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives), while China sees the latter three
states as essential nodes in its One Belt One Road (“New Silk Road”) policy.
Inevitably, given these competing interests (India wants China out of South
Asia, China sees a pressing need to boost its presence there), the two Asian
Supergiants are bound to continue their Cold War no matter what.
Pakistan Becomes
More Multipolar, India Goes Unipolar:
As a consequence
of the Indian-Chinese Cold War, it’s likely that Pakistan will move closer to
the multipolar camp at the same time as India drifts towards the unipolar one.
The reason for this is obviously, and it’s that there will probably be a direct
correlation between a worsening of Indian-Chinese ties and Indian-Pakistani
ones, with China and Pakistan correlating their actions as per the strategic
partnership between them. Nobody wants to see South Asia become a flashpoint in
the New Cold War, and it’s not to say that it’ll become a ‘hot spot’
necessarily, but that each of the two sides (China/Pakistan and India) will
progressively diverge in their strategic visions until it becomes clear after a
few more years that India is a lot more closely aligned with the US and Japan
(foreseeably in containing China, perhaps even in the South China Sea) than it
is with China and Russia in BRICS. India will probably still remain in BRICS
and the SCO, and ties with Russia might be largely unaffected by everything,
but it’s the bilateral issues between India and China that will be disruptive
for the world.
As a strong
example in proving the direction that India’s headed, Japanese Premier Shinzo
Abe, probably the most anti-Chinese leader in the world today, visited New
Delhi earlier this month and signed a raft of strategic agreements with his
Indian counterpart, Modi. As a result, Japan will now be supplying India with
military technology, cooperating with it in nuclear energy projects, and
building its first high-speed railroad. In one quick move, India demonstrated
to the rest of the world that it was unreservedly siding with Japan (and by
implied extension, the US) against China, even going as far as directly
addressing “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea in a euphemistic
swipe against Beijing. The Indian establishment has made its choice and charted
its future for the next couple of years at least, so there’s no use speaking
about any substantial Indian-Chinese détente in the coming future. It doesn’t
mean that they’ll come to direct blows or have a dramatic falling out akin to
the Sino-Soviet one of the Old Cold War (although that’s certainly possible
with time, with India becoming the West’s ‘China’ in this neo-era of
containment), but that their cooperation in BRICS and the SCO is predicated
solely on the least common denominator of self-interest and that all other
pretenses of ‘friendship’ and ‘cooperation’ are mere illusions.
Nepal Cracks:
Concerning Nepal,
the circumstances of the Indian-Chinese Cold War are slightly different and
take on a unique form. The only reason that China has been able to make sure
strategic headway in the Himalayan state over the past couple of months is
because of the flat-out failure of India’s foreign policy there. New Delhi
enacted a de-facto blockade in support of the culturally, religiously, and
ethnically similar Madhesi group that was protesting against the country’s new
constitution, ostensibly on the grounds that it dilutes their political power.
India, likely wanting to institutionally deepen its grip over its proxy, sought
to aggressively blockade goods (and especially fuel) from entering the state,
hoping that this would pressure the government enough that it would quickly
backtrack and amend the constitution. Long story short, Kathmandu pushed back
and quickly pivoted to China to help, which has now formally broken the
decades-long monopoly that Indian fuel suppliers had over the Nepalese market,
thus irreversibly taking the former Kingdom out of India’s full sphere of
influence. Even if Nepal does tactically backtrack on the constitution and
implements the pro-Madhesi ‘reforms’ that India supposedly wants (which is what
appears to be happening), then that still can’t shake off the strategic hold
that China has now gained.
Instead, a resolution
of the Nepali Constitutional Crisis according to India’s vision could
paradoxically prompt a civil war inside the country. If the Madhesi use their
possibly newfound powers to obstruct state mechanisms and/or make a pro-Indian
power play against the government, then Kathmandu would be forced to fight back
in one way or another. Similarly, if the Madhesi are successful in carving out
their own ethnic-based federal state, then this would inspire other, smaller
groups to do the same thing, thus potentially catalyzing the Somali-like
decentralization of the country along ethnic-regional lines. The federal forces
probably wouldn’t let it get to that point, and the other ethnic groups have
weaker economic levers to pull in pressuring Kathmandu, but all the same, the
destabilization would have to be dealt with, and the course of events that
could predictably ensue might exacerbate domestic tensions even more push the
country further along the path to another civil war, albeit this time
ethno-regional based as opposed to a Maoist ideological struggle.
Bangladesh Begins
Its Descent:
Barring a miracle
(which can of course happen), it doesn’t seem likely that Bangladesh will pull
out of the destabilization trap that it’s seems to inevitably be descending
towards. The political crisis between the ruling government and the
‘opposition’ has already led to an increase in tension between both camps, and
the involvement of ISIL-related terrorism is one of the most inopportune
developments that could happen to the country at this critical time. The pace
and intensify at which Bangladesh slips into chaos is dependent on the
following factors: the level of violent Islamist infiltration and sympathy
levels in the country (no reliable quantitative data exists although it’s
presumed that the ‘opposition’s’ supporters are favorable towards these
ideologies); the ‘opposition’s’ desire to seize power and possibly resort to
violent means in doing so; and the involvement of the US in destabilizing the
present Bangladeshi government (which, while being pro-India at the moment, is
‘uncomfortably’ too ‘pro-Chinese’ for Washington). It already seems as though
all of the criteria are reached to some degree or another, meaning that it’s
quite likely that Bangladesh will experience a wave of destabilizing events
sometime next year, with Saudi Arabia and/or Qatar fulfilling the necessary
Lead From Behind roles in clandestinely supporting the Islamist ‘opposition’
(be it ‘legitimate’ political figures or outright terrorists).
Struggling With
The ‘Seven Sisters’:
India’s seven
Northeast Provinces are the most unstable region in the country, located in a
geographically inconvenient area for the central government to enforce and
comprised of many different (and oftentimes, feuding) ethnicities. While there
are many ethnic-based insurgencies and terrorist groups active in the region,
two of the most notorious are the Bodo and the Naga. The author wrote
extensively about the former one year ago when they launched their last high-profile
attack, while the latter were discussed in June after India staged a
cross-border raid into Myanmar as a reprisal for the group’s last
anti-government ambush. While both groups have laid low ever since their
respective headline-grabbing attacks, it doesn’t mean that they’ve technically
gone anywhere, and the threat that each of them represents is still very real.
The Nagas are particularly dangerous because they are part of an umbrella
separatist/terrorist organization called the United Liberation Front of West
South East Asia (UNLFW). The author also examined this topic in-depth in an
earlier piece for Oriental Review, with the main conclusion being that the
union of ethnic anti-government forces represents a very destabilizing
development in Northeast India that New Delhi must neutralize at all costs.
Failure to do so would absolutely undermine its Act East strategy and stall any
forthcoming effectiveness of the ASEAN Highway to Thailand.
It might not
necessarily be next year, but there’s a high probability that the ethnic
cauldron that’s brewing in Northeast India will naturally overflow sometime
soon, and if large-scale inter-ethnic fighting commences, it might be very
difficult for the central government to quell. The Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, and
Naga might become entangled in a horrific humanitarian catastrophe if the armed
groups among them experience a falling out, although for now everything seems
relatively stable between them owing to the existence of the umbrella UNLFW.
This is yet another reason why the situation is so particularly tricky for New
Delhi: on the one hand, it needs to defeat the separatists/terrorists, but on
the other, by breaking the militant bonds that unite each of these disparate
ethnic groups, it might unintentionally prompt a nightmare scenario where they
turn against one another in a deadly blame-game and start wantonly killing each
other’s civilian population. One of the only ways to preempt this, aside from
militarily squashing the groups, is to place a heightened military focus on the
area and commence renewed anti-insurgent operations for rooting out these
movements and their supporters, but that might unintentionally provoke even
more endemic anti-government suspicion that could serve to further legitimize
the demands of the separatist non-terrorist voices there. All in all, India’s
Northeast is definitely it’s most vulnerable region, and one could go as far as
saying that it’s perhaps the entire country’s Achilles’ heel it not properly
dealt with.
Sri Lanka Stays
The Course:
While not as
“sexy” of a forecast to make as any of the earlier ones, it should still be
documented that the author believes that Sri Lanka will not drift from its
current pro-Western course. Rajapaksa’s political comeback was sorely squashed
earlier this year in a clear sign that the current administration has largely
succeeded in blackening his name and maligning his reputation ever since they
came to power. However, there is also the possibility that the present
leadership might be convinced to pragmatically reengage with China in
developing select projects, but they’d have to walk an extraordinarily fine
line in doing so in order to not anger their new Indian and American patrons.
For the most part, despite China’s earlier plans for Sri Lanka to be a its
Indian Ocean ‘jewel’, it’ll now likely only be a routine stop-over point with
much less of a strategic significance than was previously assumed. The only
thing that could change this is a worsening of Indian-Sri Lankan ties and/or a
revival of the Sri Lankan nationalist movement, but both don’t seem to be on
the horizon going into 2016.
The Maldives Move
To The Middle Of A Saudi-Chinese Rivalry:
It may come off
as surprising to some, and it will be admitted that the author himself also
didn’t quite see it coming until after the fact, but the Maldives are now smack
dab in the middle of a Saudi-Chinese rivalry. In explaining how this came to
be, it’s relevant to quote the author’s latest article from Katehon that
touches on why the island nation decided to join the Saudis’ “anti-terrorist”
coalition:
“The Maldives are
another member of the Saudi-led coalition, and its incorporation is equally
controversial for how it raises questions about the country’s strong
partnership with China. The author exhaustively elaborated on the Maldives’
geopolitical role and relationship with China in a previous three-part series
for Oriental Review, but to summarize, Beijing has made rapid and strategic
inroads in the island chain nation that have resulted in a close geostrategic
partnership between both countries.
All of that’s
being endangered now because of the Saudis’ outreaches to the archipelago, and
it’s very probable that the forces behind the assassination conspiracy that
earlier wracked the country might have made one of their demands to stop
conditional on the government moving away from China and closer to Saudi Arabia
instead.
Riyadh announced
in early 2014 that it would invest $100 million in the country and it opened
its first-ever embassy in the Sharia-adhering state back in August. Almost
right after the assassination scare suddenly ended, the two states signed an
agreement to boost religious ties (i.e. institutionalize Wahhabist influence)
and the Maldives then asked Saudi Arabia to develop a special economic zone in
the country. All told, just like in
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia is wrestling with China for influence in a state that
had hitherto been under Beijing’s sway.”
When one thinks
about it, this makes for a very interesting dynamic, as Saudi Arabia and China
have never previously entered into a proxy competition anywhere, let alone out
of both of their respective home theaters. It’ll be curious to see how this
develops in the future. The Saudis are obviously ingraining themselves deep
enough in the Maldives so as to make their future departure all but impossible
without massive bloodshed and a spree of terrorist attacks, but at the same
time, the Chinese are such prized partners of the island nation’s elite
primarily because they present an alternative to otherwise inevitable Indian
domination.
If the Chinese
ever got dislodged, perhaps through a similar neck-and-neck pro-Western
electoral shift like in Sri Lanka or an outright Color Revolution, then the
Saudis could easily compensate for the lost capital investment, thus meaning
that Chinas’ only real anchor in the country is the loyalty that certain elite
have towards it. One would like to believe that the Maldivian elite fear Saudi
Wahhabism just as much as they do Indian domination, but that regretfully
doesn’t seem to be the case, and Riyadh might just gradually push Beijing out
with the wink-and-a-nod approval of their newest bought-and-paid-for lackeys
there. It’s still too early to tell if this is exactly what can happen, but all
indications seem to point in this direction, thereby making it worthwhile for
the interested observer to casually monitor events in this geo-strategic island
nation.
South Asia:
Disruptors
“The Asian
Frown”:
The author’s
neologism refers to the shape of the northern reaches of the Bay of Bengal
between the Indian state of West Bengal, Bangladesh, and Myanmar’s Rakhine
State. This patch of territory is also inhabited almost completely by ethnic
Bengalis, with the exception of Rakhine State where they form a substantial and
much-publicized minority otherwise known as the “Rohingya”. It’s not the aim of
this piece to debate the merits of Myanmar’s citizenship law and this group’s
lack of legal status in the country, but simply to raise awareness of the
potential for Islamic radicalization among them. As regards Bangladesh, this
has already been elaborated upon earlier, but there’s also the eventuality that
a transnational ‘patriotic’ movement forms between Bangladesh and the majority
Bengali/”Rohingya”-inhabited borderland areas of Rakhine State in the future,
whether in response to any Buddhist nationalist-driven violence or a
state-directed crackdown (no matter if it’s provoked or unprovoked). If this
demographic is pushed or tricked into taking up arms against the state, then
there’s a high likelihood that cross-border supporters in Bangladesh will be
assisting them to some capacity (even if they are not state-sanctioned), thus
internationalizing what otherwise would have been a local and largely isolated
domestic crisis into something much larger.
West Bengal is
included in the analysis because of the ethnic and of course civilizational
similarity that it has with Bangladesh proper. The key difference, however, is
that most West Bengalis are Hindu, not Muslim, and that with Bangladesh on the
edge of descending into an Islamic pit, it’s possible that some of the
‘anti-infidel’ violence might predictably migrate cross-border against the
Hindu-espousing Bengalis. For convenient reference, Wahhabis fiercely hate
Hindus more than any other group because they believe in multiple gods, thus
making them infinitely higher level of ‘evil’ than Christians, Jews, or
Shiites/Alawites/other Muslim minorities that believe in the same God from the
Holy Books. Hindus are even seen as worse than atheists who plainly reject god,
as they believe it is worse to worship multiple gods than to reject the one
true God. The ethnic similarities but confessional discrepancies between the
people of West Bengal and Bangladesh might spur Wahhabi-affiliated terrorists
in the latter (or even indigenous to West Bengal) to go on a fierce jihad
against their compatriots. Bengali-on-Bengali violence (prompted by
Wahhabi-on-Hindu motives) would present yet another domestic headache for India
to deal with and could lead to the rapid deterioration of positive relations
that it the Modi government has thus far cultivated with Bangladesh.
Additionally, as
regards all of the preceding “Asian Frown” scenarios, a crisis in one could
lead to a humanitarian crisis in the others with Bengali refugees fleeing for
safety in one direction or the other, and these resultant human flows could
further exacerbate domestic tensions in the host area and trigger the said
conflicts that were just discussed. For example, a large-scale outbreak of
terrorism in Bangladesh could lead to Muslim Bengalis flooding into
majority-Hindu West Bengal or Bengali/”Rohingya”-minority Rakhine State,
disrupting the present balance and enflaming sectarian/ethnic tensions there.
Likewise, if the Bengalis/”Rohingya” in Rakhine State were pushed out towards
Bangladesh, Bengali nationalists would allege ethnic cleansing and possible
genocide and these non-state actors might intervene in the situation and
contribute to its spiraling deterioration. In West Bengal, if Hindu
nationalists get on the ascent, any anti-Muslim violence or provocations linked
to them could trigger pro-Islamist sympathies among the minority population or
even the entirety of Bangladesh, undermining bilateral relations and raising
the chances of identity (and perhaps even state) conflict.
A Serious
Security Dilemma Between India and China/Pakistan:
This disruption
possibility isn’t that likely in 2016, although it may become an eventuality
further down the line, but since it’s theoretically possible given the current
trend of proxy hostility in Indian-Chinese relations, it should at the very
least be mentioned in this analysis. It doesn’t see all that likely, barring an
unforeseen event such as a state-sponsored terrorist attack (even if the state
sponsoring it isn’t native to the region, such as the US), that India and
Pakistan will naturally deteriorate the recovering relations between them,
especially since so much money and strategic benefit depends on their positive
cooperation in TAPI.
Therefore, it
looks more probable that Indian-Chinese relations would be the ones that lessen
to the point of creating a massive security dilemma between the two parties,
possibly even involving border buildups or outright skirmishes. In any event
and regardless of which party is responsible, China is predicted to call upon
its Pakistani ally in coordinating its supportive response, and it’s very
likely that Islamabad will be there to assist its ally out of decades-long
loyalty, no matter if this might temporarily endanger its own self-interest
through TAPI.
Beijing wouldn’t’
call upon this ‘favor’ unless it was serious about sending a message because it
understands the strategic benefit that TAPI indirectly provides to it by having
its ally control part of India’s energy flow, so only under certain
circumstances would it ask Pakistan to join it and basically freeze the project
as a result. Should it happen, though, that India gets into a serious security
dilemma with China/Pakistan, then it would only accelerate New Delhi’s unipolar
shift and result in the Indian-Chinese Cold War going public. At this stage, it
would become all but irreversible and might even lead to India’s full-fledged
and formalized membership in the China Containment Coalition.
Even though India
is already a de-facto member (especially after Abe’s visit), it hasn’t yet sent
its forces to the South China Sea or engaged in any of the border provocations
that Japan and its ASEAN allies (Vietnam and the Philippines) have, which it
theoretically could do along the disputed frontier that it has with China. On
the other hand, it might even be for these reasons (border provocations as a
means of proving loyalty to the Chinese Containment Coalition) that India
decides to initiate conventional tensions with China and set the whole security
dilemma into stage-managed motion. In such an event, the US would surely find a
way to strategically capitalize off of it and might even try to have India host
some of its military forces.
The Maldives Get
Mangled By Hybrid War:
It looks for now
like the Maldives’ political crisis (earlier discussed in full here) has
subsided for the time being, with the earlier-cited Saudi-affiliated deal
probably having something to do with it. Even though things appear calm on the
surface, there’s always the risk that the Saudis have a seemingly unexpected
trick up their sleeve and might be plotting the islands’ full-scale
destabilization this very moment. One of the reasons might be to drive out all
Chinese investment and replace it with capital from the Saudi royal family.
Another possibility might be that India wants to support the already existing
Color Revolution forces there out of the general uneasiness that the ‘pro-Chinese’
leadership makes it feel. At any rate and no matter the motivation, India
and/or Saudi Arabia could each initiate their own or joint destabilization,
with New Delhi focusing more on the Color Revolution aspect and Riyadh on the
Unconventional War one. Put together in a chaotic continuum, then this creates
the perfect recipe for Hybrid War. Not only would this probably succeed in
dislodging the Chinese from their geostrategic Indian Ocean outpost, but the
resultant fight for the spoils might even put Saudi Arabia and India directly
at odds with one another, thereby increasing the chances that the Kingdom
supports Wahhabi terrorism in West Bengal or elsewhere.
***
CHAPTER FIVE
ASEAN: State Of
Play
Southeast Asia
didn’t just experience another year of robust economic growth (as it always
does), but this time it saw the US doubling down in its “Pivot to Asia” and
tangibly affecting the regional security architecture there. Although not a
geographic part of the region, Japan began to take on an enhanced role there
through its militant revision of the pacifist constitution. It now seems likely
that Tokyo will deepen its military partnership with the Philippines and
perhaps even expand it to Vietnam as well, with arms sales expected to play a
leading role in Japan’s “Pivot to ASEAN”. Speaking of the former American
colony, the US and the Philippines inked a deal euphemistically called the
“Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement”, which basically heralds the formal
return of military occupation to the island chain under the auspices of
‘countering China’.
Parallel to this,
the US has sought to expand its strategic dealings with the other side of the
South China Sea by pledging $18 million worth of patrol boats to Vietnam. A
symbolic and insubstantial gesture to be sure, but one which indicates that the
two formerly bitter enemies are now close enough in their shared anti-China
policies to enhance their cooperation to further unprecedented heights in the
coming year. Taken together, the US-supervised gathering of Japan, the
Philippines, and Vietnam composes the core of the China Containment Coalition
(CCC), a proto-‘Asian NATO’ that it hopes will become the proxy vanguard force
in offsetting Beijing. In a more asymmetrical sense, the US’ ‘electoral coup’
in Myanmar via the victory of Aung San Suu Kyi advances Naypyidaw’s
several-years-long policy of moving away from China, representing yet another
emerging geopolitical complication for the People’s Republic.
Economically
speaking, there’s also been a lot of activity in ASEAN that quite naturally
takes on New Cold War contours. India and Japan are ‘tag-teaming’ China in the
Greater Mekong Subregion (the Tokyo-led Asian Development Bank’s neologism for
mainland ASEAN) through a series of complementary East-West infrastructure
projects. India is making progress on the trilateral highway with Myanmar and
Thailand (referred to by the author as the ASEAN Highway) while Japan is
clinching deals to build a high-speed rail network along the East-West and
Southern Corridors (map of all projects here, with the ASEAN Highway being
referred to as the Western Corridor). At the same time, however, China is
rushing to break out of the containment trap being set up against it and is
streamlining the North-South Corridor through Laos and Thailand in order to
connect to Singapore, possibly even planning to detour the route to Thailand’s
Indian Ocean coast if unforeseen disruptions occur (Southern Thai terrorist
insurgency, Malaysian Color Revolution) that prevent it from linking with its
terminal destination. As part of this overall grand strategy, China and others
are deepening their partnerships with Thailand, the anticipated infrastructure
hub for the Greater Mekong Subregion.
The final big
move that happened in ASEAN over the past year was on the institutional front.
The TPP made significant headway in growing acceptance among the Vietnamese,
Bruneian, Malaysian, and Singaporean members of the US-controlled trade pact,
showing that American influence is deeply is about to become deeply entrenched
in part of the overall trade bloc. This bodes quite ominously for ASEAN as a
whole, since the entire organization is integrating into the ASEAN Economic
Community (AEC) and may try to ‘standardize’ its trade pacts by applying the
TPP to each of its members. While the AEC has the potential to become a
multipolar, or at the very least, relatively neutral actor in the New Cold War,
this possibility becomes more diminished as the TPP continues to make inroads
throughout the bloc.
The Empire Of The
Rising Sun Returns:
Up until this
year, it wasn’t guaranteed that Japan would return to its militaristic pre-1945
roots, but Shinzo Abe made it his primary objective to make sure that this
revisionist objective was achieved. Not only has Japan unilaterally
‘reinterpreted’ its pacifist constitution to enable international military
operations, but it’s also lifted its self-imposed moratorium on arms exports as
well. These two historic decisions mean that Japan is taking determined steps
to assert its military presence abroad, most likely with the intent being to
focus on ASEAN (which it had formerly colonized in full during World War II)
and the South China Sea. Already, Japan has partaken in provocative joint
exercises with the Philippines and signed a new military deal with it back in
November. Similarly, Tokyo has moved a lot closer to Hanoi as well, showing
that its vision of an ‘ASEAN Pivot’ has concrete policy applications to back it
up. Last but not least, Abe just returned from a visit to India where he signed
a bunch of agreements with Modi, erasing all doubt that an Indian-Japanese
anti-Chinese partnership is definitely in the works.
The US Is Back In
The Philippines:
The Pentagon was
ingloriously kicked out of it colony in 1991, but it made a stunning return in
2015 with the so-called “Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement”. The specifics
are that the US isn’t allowed to have its own sovereign base in the country,
but that it can ‘rotate’ troops in and out of at least 8 different Filipino
facilities. For all intents and purposes, this amounts to the exact same thing
as basing rights and should accordingly be treated as such. The US knows that
the Philippines is by far the weakest of the anti-Chinese states, but the
opportunity that this provides Washington is to sell it battered, second-hand
military wares that other states would ashamed to purchase. It also gives the
US the opportunity to retrain the Filipino Armed Forces ‘from the ground up’,
thus providing them with valuable experience in ‘nation building’ from the
military-structural sense. As a final point, the Philippines present the
perfect convergence point for all the other elements of the China Containment
Coalition (CCC) to coalesce, and any preplanned provocation on that country’s
part (carried out at the US’ behest, of course) could be the trigger that’s
necessary to kick the CCC into high, formalized gear in Southeast Asia just as
Ukraine’s aggression against Donbass was for NATO in Eastern Europe.
The Chinese
Containment Coalition Takes Shape:
The author
explored this geopolitical project in a recent publication for Oriental Review
and will elaborate on it more specifically in an upcoming article, but to
briefly rehash the idea, the US has assembled a diverse array of Asian states
in jointly working to contain China. For the most part, it involves Japan and
India as the Lead From Behind partners , Vietnam and the Philippines as the
geopolitical proxies, and Australia and Indonesia as auxiliary support members.
The general concept is that Vietnam and the Philippines, as the two South China
Sea states having the strongest maritime disagreements with China, form the
vanguard component of this undeclared alliance, and the US, Japan, and to a degree,
India, support them to varying degrees, with the first two providing military
equipment while the latter seems poised to diplomatically enter the fray
sometime soon. Australia’s contribution is more symbolic than substantial, and
Indonesia’s role is expected to only be purely economic and as an emerging
regional counterweight to China. As was said, this will be described more in a
forthcoming Oriental Review piece, but for the meantime, it’s simply important
to understand that 2015 was the year in which the CCC finally began to take
significant shape and dole out its envisioned roles among the selected
participants.
Myanmar Moves
Westward:
This process was
in the works ever since the 2010 election, but it uncontrollably accelerated
with Aung San Suu Kyi’s victory. It’s still not yet 100% sure that Myanmar will
completely abandon its formerly close ties with China (Beijing courted Suu Kyi
over the summer in an unprecedented outreach to a foreign “opposition”
candidate), but it can be safely assumed that the relationship is irreparable
and that the country has ‘opened up’ to a wide enough degree that Chinese
businesses are being dislodged and replaced by their Western, Indian, Japanese,
and ASEAN competitors. China still has its oil and gas pipeline corridor
running through the country and which opened only in January, but with all of
the political changes that have taken place since it was originally conceived
of a years ago and the rate at which it’s happened, it looks to be an
insurmountable challenge for China to convert this into a full-scale economic
corridor akin to India’s ASEAN Highway. So long as the pipeline infrastructure
remains secure, then China doesn’t have too much to seriously fret about, but
if Suu Kyi’s government starts trying to blackmail Beijing by using this
infrastructure project as a vulnerable soft target, then bilateral relations
could suddenly deteriorate to the point where Naypyidaw formally joins the CCC
(which might be the predetermined point of any provocation).
The Indo-Japanese
‘Tag-Team’ Arrangement vs. The ASEAN Silk Road:
India and Japan
are entrenching themselves into mainland ASEAN through the construction of
large-scale infrastructure projects meant to promote their interests. India’s
ASEAN Highway is slated to be completed in 2019 and will intensify New Delhi’s
influence in this neighboring region, while Japan just completed the East-West
and Southern Corridors earlier this year. Taken together, these two Lead From
Behind partners in the CCC are aiming to branch ASEAN’s trade off to the west
and east, respectively, in an effort to siphon it off from its conventional
northern route in order to economically compete with China. As it stands, China
is currently the number one trading partner for ASEAN, but the whole point of
the Indian and Japanese ‘tag-team’ arrangement is to change that through the
construction of facilitative infrastructure, thereby presenting an asymmetrical
containment of Beijing’s influence predicated on stopping or diminishing the
impact of the ASEAN Silk Road from Kunming to Singapore.
Concerning
China’s ambitious designs, it just began the first step of its project by
breaking ground in Laos, with further plans to link the envisioned road to
Thailand, Malaysia, and finally to Singapore. Theoretically speaking, it’s
possible for the unipolar (the Indo-Japanese ‘tag-team’ arrangement) and
multipolar (ASEAN Silk Road) projects to peacefully coexist in the same region,
but the US has a strategic interest in seeing China’s be stopped dead in its
tracks. India and Japan’s projects can’t directly do that (only a regime change
or Hybrid War in the transit states is capable of this), but they could
possibly become so lucrative that they shift Thailand’s decision-making
priorities and lead to the North-South Corridors indefinite stalling. It
doesn’t look like this will happen right away, but it’s certainly on the mind
of strategists in Tokyo and New Delhi.
All Roads Lead
Through Thailand:
Continuing off of
the analysis above, it’s clear that Thailand is at the literal center of every
non-regional Great Powers’ interests. The US is furious that it’s previously
preeminent position was downgraded after the military coup against its proxy
designate, and China knows that this is the precise window of opportunity for
it to deepen its full-spectrum relations with this geostrategic state.
Similarly, India and Japan recognize Thailand’s importance in also
accommodating their respective regional infrastructure visions and thus can’t
be too publicly harsh on it for Bangkok’s warm ties with Beijing. Russia’s even
involved in this to a minor extent, with Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev
offering Thailand a free trade agreement with the Eurasian Union during his
visit to the country last April. No commitment was made at the time, but the
two sides agreed to study it further in the future.
Intermixing The
TPP With The AEC:
Some of the most
crucial regional developments to occur in Southeast Asia took place at the tail
end of the year, with the four regional TPP-party states agreeing to move
forward with the US-led project and the entire ASEAN organization finally
making the decision to integrate into the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC). Like
with many of the most important stories of 2015, the author also analyzed both
of this in yet another of his Oriental Review articles, with the earlier
warning that the TPP might take over the AEC being the dominant theme
throughout. Without a doubt, the US’ efforts to integrate the rest of the AEC
into the TPP (using the organizational states already party to the agreement as
valuable instruments) will become a defining theme in the coming years.
ASEAN: Where It’s
Headed
The State Of Play
section located just above touched heavily upon the direction that the existing
regional trends are headed, but to expand slightly on what was mentioned, the
following is necessary:
The CCC Gets
Stronger:
The interaction
between the US, Japan, Vietnam, and the Philippines is expected to become one
of the most defining elements of Southeast Asia’s political development in the
next year. Both regional states (Vietnam and the Philippines) will predictably
feel more emboldened by the international support that they’re receiving,
especially since it’s coming from such big-name actors as the US and Japan, and
might even take more aggressive moves in asserting their South China Sea
claims. Bilateral, trilateral, or quadrilateral military drills could take
place here, too, and this would definitely be done in as flamboyant of a manner
as possible so as to irk China to the maximum. All of the sides will continue
coordinating their policies in ‘containing’ China, and the CCC is expected to
get stronger as a result.
This will make it
a lot easier for Australia and India to play more active roles when they’re
ready, and some quasi-formalization of this military bloc might also occur next
year as well. With the US now back in the Philippines and Japan’s pacifist
constitution ‘reinterpreted’ and allowing for arms sales to these two states
and perhaps even a military presence in the Philippines, the two Pacific Powers
won’t be able to help themselves and will exploit the situation as much as they
can. China, as anyone could predict, will be very upset by all of this and will
begin to fully feel the pressure of containment in the South China Sea, thereby
prompting it to accelerate its plans for the ASEAN Silk Road as a suitable
‘escape plan’ from the maritime containment belt being built around it.
Vietnam Retraces
Its Cold War Sphere Of Influence:
Buoyed by the
support it’s receiving from the US and Japan, Vietnam will feel confident
enough to reassert itself in its Cold War-era sphere of influence in Laos and
Cambodia. Hanoi is still a strong actor in each, but its influence has been on
the decline since the end of the Cold War and each of its two neighbors’
strategic and economic realignment towards China. However, these two are also
part of the East-West and Southern Corridors, both of which are financed by
Japan, so Vietnam has the potential to use its East Asian ally’s infrastructure
investments as a springboard for reinserting its pecuniary influence into these
states. In relation to this, Vietnam just announced a “Development Triangle”
between itself and its two neighbors, and this trend of Hanoi’s shift to the
west will definitely grow stronger in the next year. The whole point of it, one
must remember, is to compete with China to the point of making both countries
‘contested’ geopolitical territory between the two and hopefully offset the
viability of the ASEAN Silk Road through Laos. Concerning Cambodia, Vietnam
would like for the government to be wooed away from China and brought closer to
India, Japan, and itself, with the Southern Corridor being envisioned vehicle
for doing so.
Myanmar Continues
Its Pro-Western Pivot, Relations With Military Get Tense:
There’s no way
that Aung San Suu Kyi will not behave as the West’s most vehement advocate in
mainland ASEAN, but the only question is the pace and degree to which she
pivots away from China. It’ll probably be that she takes moves to restrict
China’s resource extraction businesses in the frontier regions, but she might
even do more than that by trying to quickly seal trade deals with other
parties, all as part of a larger effort to replace Chinese investment with that
of her new patrons. The one thing that needs to be watched is how she interacts
with the military and how pliable they are to her rapid foreign policy shifts.
Of course, they were the ones who took the decision to ‘democratize’ and move
away from China in the first place, but it could be that they naively
underestimated the quickness with which certain changes would be made once they
formally lost control of the government. If they feel themselves being sidelined
too much (and the self-enrichment that their highest leaders have made since
‘opening up’ isn’t satisfactory ‘compensation’ to ‘stand down’), then they
might make an attempt to push back. It probably won’t take the form of a coup
(there’d be too much international condemnation and they’d lose all the
‘progress’ they believe they’ve made so far), but they could possibly take to
‘playing the game’ in parliament to undermine anything Suu Kyi wants to pass
through.
Additionally,
there’s always the lingering threat of a military conflagration between the
warring ethnic parties along the periphery. The Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement
(analyzed here) that was signed in October didn’t have the full participation
of several key anti-government groups, and the nightmare scenario would be if
these parties team up to take on the military and/or government. More than
likely, if they do in fact coordinate past the nominal sense, they’d fight back
against the military, but it would make for an interesting development if some
of them, feeling ostracized by the new authorities or unhappy with Suu Kyi’s
lack of progress in ‘reforms’ (a keyword for federalization, and potentially
stonewalled by the military via the previously mentioned scenario), could
revolt against her government. Even more curiously would be if the military
refused to squash the rebels as they normally would be accustomed to doing and
instead allowed the crisis to spiral more out of control in order to
delegitimize Suu Kyi and pave the way for a forthcoming return to martial law.
The chances for this aren’t likely, but developments in Myanmar’s civil war are
always difficult to predict, and with scant reliable information coming out of
this theater, observers should be prepared to read between the lines and
decipher what may be truly going on behind the scenes. Nonetheless, Myanmar’s
Civil War, the longest-running domestic conflict in the world, didn’t go away
just because Suu Kyi won, and it should continue to be monitored going into the
next year.
Thai Tumult:
Things might not
go so smoothly for Thailand next year, but it wouldn’t be because of lack of
trying on its part or that of its partners. If anything, despite being
geopolitical rivals, China and Japan & India want to see the crucially located
infrastructure hub remain stable and peaceful for the years to come, owing to
each of their respective investments (quite literally) in its key transit role
status. The only actor that would be content with its destabilization is the US
and it already looks to be testing the water. 2015 saw a suspicious instance of
Uighur terrorism occur in Central Bangkok and Shinawatra’s “Red Shirts” seem
ready for a renewal of their ritual destabilization. Interested readers are
strongly suggested to follow Tony Cartalucci’s writings, since this Thai-based
journalist has done an unparalleled job at exposing the US’ destabilization
mechanisms in his host country. Keeping in mind that the US both wants to
punish Thailand’s military leaders and create the conditions to where China’s
ASEAN Silk Road is unviable, it’s conceivable that it’ll resort to its
tried-and-tested tactics of Uighur terrorism, Color Revolution incitement, and
Hybrid War threats.
To very briefly
elaborate on the last one, the northeast province of Isan is known as a bastion
for the Shinawatra clan and its “Red Shirt” cronies, and it could become the
center of a concentrated anti-government push. The distinct regional identity
(somewhat more comparable to Thailand’s civilizationally similar Laotian neighbor
than the rest of Thailand itself) could be used as a rallying cry for
encouraging “separateness” and enflaming (NGO-riled up) ‘grassroots’ anger
against the authorities. This same template can be used by regime
change-supporting NGOs in the country’s south, albeit much more violently. The
Muslim and ethnic Malay population there already feels sidelined from the rest
of the state for a variety of reasons, although terrorist attacks there haven’t
been as frequent as in years past. However, with the rise of ISIL in the
region, it’s possible that the group’s template of transnational
territorial-administrative expansion might transplant itself along the
Thai-Malay border if the structural conditions are amenable. Transnational
ethnic-affiliated terrorism would be a major destabilizing force in the region
and could seriously jeopardize bilateral relations between Thailand and
Malaysia, especially as neither government wants any part in this pandemonium.
Ultimately it
would be the US that would benefit from either (or both) of these scenarios if
they come to fruition, since it wants to undermine the military government so
as to return the “Red Shirt” proxies to power, whether they are led by a
Shinawatra figurehead or some ‘new blood’. The US is also not beyond sabotaging
its Lead From Behind allies’ infrastructure projects if they become ‘necessary’
collateral damage to fulfill the regime change goal and stop China’s ASEAN Silk
Road.
ASEAN: Disruptors
Each of the three
regionally disruptive scenarios mentioned below involved Indonesia, the ‘rising
giant’ upon whose shoulders ASEAN’s macroeconomic stability depends. The author
endeavors to explain some of these scenarios and their strategic impact in a
more detailed fashion later on next year:
The
Mindanao-Sulawesi Arc:
The author raised
awareness of this geopolitical concept as part of a larger article written back
in June, but it was originally articulated at the Shangri-La Dialogue earlier
in the year when a participant voiced nervousness that terrorists might seek to
exploit this regional ‘blind spot’. To succinctly bring the reader up to speed,
the tristate maritime region between the southern Philippines, the Malaysian
state of Sabah, and the Indonesian island of Sulawesi has a comparatively
lesser governing and security presence than anywhere else in insular Southeast
Asia, and there’s already the precedent of Filipino terrorists trying to storm
Sabah in 2013. Malaysian authorities were on alert for a repeat of this
scenario just at the end of November, showing that the threat still remains.
Additionally, the island of Sulawesi might provide terrorists (be they
Filipino, native Indonesians, or non-regional ones) with a relatively
unrestricted access point to the rest of the Indonesian archipelago owing to
proximity of this location to Mindanao and Sabah, so it’s possible that a
tristate terror threat might take shape in this region one day.
A Sumatra-Java
Terror Spree:
While being
geographically large, the vast majority of Indonesia’s population is
concentrated mostly on the neighboring and densely concentrated islands of
Sumatra and Java. Australia has voiced concern about ISIL trying to establish a
caliphate here and Indonesia is “keeping an eye open” for terrorist returnees
from the Mideast. Russia has even raised the terror alert for its citizens at
the end of December, fearing an imminent attack. All of these factors,
including the countless soft targets available around Jakarta, point to a
terrorist incident occurring sometime next year in Indonesia, with it mostly be
a matter of time before one of the many threats is actually carried out in
practice. It was earlier analyzed that Bangladesh might become the next front
line state in the War on Terror, but the same could likewise also be said about
Indonesia, although mostly in this sense restricted to Sumatra-Java and
northern Sulawesi (with the former being more likely than the latter). An
eruption of terror in one of the most population dense places in the world and
the economic engine of ASEAN/AEC would easily have global repercussions.
West Papua
Revolts:
The West Papua
conflict is decades-old but is one of the world’s least well-publicized issues.
Basically, it boils down accusations that the local population is being oppressed
(and sometimes outright killed) so that the Indonesian state can continue
harvesting valuable mineral deposits from their land. It’s an unfortunate twist
of fate that both Papuas (Indonesian-controlled West Papua and the independent
state of Papua New Guinea) are dirt poor despite their well-endowed mineral
wealth, but it can largely be attributed to poor governmental planning. Jakarta
has progressively taken steps to split the western part of Papua into three
separate states so as to dilute the formerly unified identity there, but that
hasn’t fully quelled the separatist movements endemic to the area.
Without outside
patronage, they’ll likely never achieve any substantial victories, but if an
outside force decides to support it and throws their full weight behind it
(such as the US, foreseeably in that case using Australia as the Lead From
Behind actor), then it could severely unbalance the Indonesian military at the
precise time that they need to be concentrating on Wahhabist terrorist threats.
It’s therefore not forecasted that a renewed revolt in West Papua would occur
in isolation, but that it could be provoked so as to distract the Indonesian
authorities from a forthcoming terrorist offensive in order to create maximum
destabilization. That being said, there’s no clear indicators that this could
happen next year or even at all, which is why it’s in the disruptor category
and not the previous one, but interested individuals should still keep an
occasional eye on developments in this part of ASEAN for next year.