US Pivot to Asia Should Deploy Soft Power, not the Marines
http://www.juancole.com/2014/01/should-deploy-marines.html
US Pivot to Asia Should Deploy Soft Power, not the Marines
By Juan Cole | Jan. 29, 2014
(By John Feffer)
In a future update of The Devils Dictionary, the famed Ambrose Bierce dissection of the linguistic hypocrisies of modern life, a single word will accompany the entry for Pacific pivot: retreat.
It might seem a strange way to characterize the Obama administrations energetic attempt to reorient its foreign and military policy toward Asia. After all, the presidents team has insisted that the Pacific pivot will be a forceful reassertion of American power in a strategic part of the world and a deliberate reassurance to our allies that we have their backs vis-à-vis China.
Indeed, sometimes the pivot seems like little less than a panacea for all that ails U.S. foreign policy. Upset about the fiascos in Iraq and Afghanistan? Then just light out for more pacific waters. Worried that our adversaries are all melting away and the Pentagon has lost its raison dêtre? Then how about going toe to toe with China, the only conceivable future superpower on the horizon these days. And if youre concerned about the state of the U.S. economy, then the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), the regional free-trade deal Washington is trying to negotiate, might be just the shot in the arm that U.S. corporations crave.
In reality, however, the strategic rebalancing the Obama administration has been promoting as a mid-course correction to its foreign policy remains strong on rhetoric and remarkably weak on content. Think of it as a clever fiction for whose promotion many audiences are willing to suspend their disbelief. After all, in the upcoming era of Pentagon belt-tightening and domestic public backlash, Washington is likely to find it difficult to move any significant extra resources into Asia. Even the TPP is an acknowledgment of how much economic ground in the region has been lost to China.