In the 1960s, the
Soviet Union defied America's Monroe Doctrine by supporting Fidel
Castro's military buildup in Cuba. Later, it supported
insurgencies in Central America. This triggered a competition among
existing right-wing dictatorships, Marxist authoritarianism, and
the U.S. democratic model. In the end, democracy and open markets
won. Promoted by the United States, these principles have
generally made Latin American states more viable politically,
economically, and commercially.
Today, another
communist state-the People's Republic of China (PRC)-is seeking
trade, diplomatic, and military ties in Latin America and the
Caribbean. The region is rich in natural resources and
developing markets for manufactured goods and even arms. China does
not currently pose a direct military threat in Latin America and
has steadily embraced market concepts, but it represents serious
competition that could dilute U.S. influence. Washington could
ignore this intrusion or attempt to contain it. Ignoring it leaves
a vacuum for China to fill, while trying to contain it runs against
America's own free market ideals. Instead, the United States can
best look after its hemispheric interests and moderate China's
presence by:
-
Consolidating trade
relations with Latin America and removing protectionist U.S. trade
barriers,
-
Emphasizing
comprehensive relationships as opposed to narrow-interest diplomacy
such as counternarcotics,
-
Minimizing
unproductive restrictions on assistance to U.S. neighbors,
and
-
Pressing harder for
democratic and economic reforms, prioritizing support for these
purposes, and reenergizing public diplomacy.
China's Interest in
the Americas
China is the world's
oldest continuous civilization with more than 3,500 years of
written history. Its power has risen and declined, most notably in
the mid-1800s, when the ruling Qing Dynasty crumbled, inviting
rebellion and foreign intervention. At the end of World War
II, the Nationalist government, weakened by a decade of war against
Japan and wracked by corruption and incompetence, fought a
civil war against the Chinese Communist Party and was
defeated.
By 1950, communist
leaders like Mao Zedong believed their authoritarianism would
return China to glory, a belief that expired after 30 million
people starved to death in state-induced famines in the early 1960s
and another 10 million perished in fanatical ideological campaigns.
In December 1978, after several "great leaps" backward,
Communist Party leader Deng Xiaoping introduced economic
reforms that have steadily transformed the PRC into a remarkable
hybrid-a "socialist market economy"-in essence, a communist state
that uses market-based pricing principles.
Feeding the
Dragon. Twenty-five years into
this experiment, China has the world's sixth-largest economy,
the third-largest defense budget according to some estimates, and
the largest national population (1.3 billion people). According to
the World Bank, its gross domestic product of $1.6 trillion is
growing about 9 percent per year. China needs resources to feed its
rapidly expanding economy, but it does not have sufficient oil,
natural gas, aluminum, copper, or iron to satisfy its energy and
manufacturing needs. Furthermore, it needs trade partners to buy
its electronics, apparel, toys, and footwear. While
communist China is embracing market concepts, it still has a
non-market economy in which a disciplined totalitarian party
retains full authority (through the central government) over
non-state investment, import, export, and financial
decisions.
China's neighbors are
competing for many of the same world markets, as are Europe and the
United States. Latin America is a particularly promising prospect.
It is relatively unindustrialized and has an abundance of raw
materials. Moreover, authoritarian leaders and/or corrupt
oligarchies control a number of governments. Signing purchase
agreements with them is much easier than dealing with the
panoply of private corporations found in more democratic
countries.
Challenging the United
States. China's main rival for
global preeminence is the United States. China sees the United
States as preventing Taiwan's reunification with the mainland
and thwarting Beijing's rise as a power. Previously, China was
isolated, but now plays key roles in Asian geopolitics and aspires
to do so elsewhere. Besides status as a nuclear nation, it is a
member of the U.N. Security Council, the World Trade Organization,
the Group of 77 developing nations, and the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation group. It also holds observer status in the
Organization of American States.
While China has become
the second-largest U.S. trade partner after Canada, it challenges
U.S. influence wherever it can. In fact, it will soon have more
attack submarines than the United States, with the addition of four
Russian Kilo-class subs and new diesel-electric vessels
equipped with technology that will allow them to run quieter than
nuclear submarines.[1]
According to former
U.S. Ambassador to Beijing James Lilly, "[T]he facts are that [the
Chinese] run massive intelligence operations against us, they make
open statements against us, their high-level documents show that
they are not friendly to us." Chinese military white papers promote
power projection and describe U.S. policies as "hegemonism and
power politics."[2]
In the Western
Hemisphere, the Chinese are taking advantage of failures of
half-hearted market reforms and Washington's unwillingness to
pursue neighborhood relations with much enthusiasm. National
Defense University professor Cynthia A. Watson notes, "[T]he
1990s turned into a period of severe disappointment as free markets
led to rampant corruption and unfulfilled expectations in
Latin America while Washington became the world's superpower rather
than a partner for the region."[3]
Isolating
Taiwan. Since the 1949 civil
war, Taiwan has been separate from the PRC, and the PRC views
Taiwan as a "renegade province" that must be reunified with the
rest of China. Part of Beijing's plan to bring it back into the
fold has been to isolate Taiwan diplomatically. In the 1950s,
most of Latin America had diplomatic relations with Taiwan.
Then, Cuba's Fidel Castro regime established ties with China in
1960. In the 1970s, Chile led a major shift in favor of the PRC.
Currently, only 25 countries accord Taiwan diplomatic status, and
one-fourth of them are in Latin America: Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, and Paraguay. Taiwan
pays dearly for this recognition, providing development aid and
disaster assistance to these states.
Frequent
Flyers
Science, sports, and
military exchanges characterized Chinese-Latin American
relations in the 1980s. Economic relations did not develop
significantly until after 1990. A year after China repressed
dissidents in Tiananmen Square, President Yang Shangkun visited
Latin America. His trip heralded the beginning of an increasing
number of high-level missions to lay the foundation for what he
described as "a new international political and economic
order."[4]
The pace picked up at
the turn of the century. In April 2001, Chinese President Jiang
Zemin presided over a 12-day mission to cement economic and
trade ties, as well as attack what he called Washington's
"unipolar" scheme.[5] His itinerary included Argentina, Uruguay,
Brazil, Cuba, and Venezuela. Li Peng, chairman of the Standing
Committee of the People's National Congress, followed up with
more visits in November 2001. In November 2004, President Hu
Jintao flew to Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Cuba, where he signed
39 bilateral agreements and announced $100 billion in
investments over the next 10 years. In May of this year, Communist
Party Chairman Jia Qinglin visited Colombia, Mexico, Uruguay,
and Cuba.
Building on simple
commercial agreements, China has advanced to economic assistance,
direct investment, a few joint ventures, and military ties. When
Argentina's financial collapse rippled through South America's
Southern Cone, China quickly seized the chance to increase its
stake in Argentina and Brazil, while U.S. investment declined by
nearly half. Joint ventures include partnerships with Great
Dragon Telecom in Cuba as well as Colombia. China is partnering
with Brazil to improve that country's railways and establish a rail
link to the Pacific to cut transportation costs of iron ore and
soybeans. Chile's congested port at Antofagasta may get a
facelift thanks to the PRC.
To meet domestic
industrial needs and consumer demand, China has pursued
investments and agreements with such oil producers as
Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil, and even
Mexico. The best fit is with Venezuela's authoritarian leader
Hugo Chávez, who directly controls the state oil industry.
President Chávez has invited the Chinese National Petroleum
Corporation (CNPC) to participate in exploring the rich Orinoco
belt. Meanwhile, the CNPC has invested $300 million in technology
to use Venezuela's Orimulsion fuel in Chinese power
plants.
For now, Venezuela
plans to increase exports to China by 300,000 barrels per day and
recently signed an agreement with Colombia to build a pipeline to
the port of Tribuga on the Pacific coast, since supertankers cannot
pass through the Panama Canal. An additional proposal with
Panama would modify a Panamanian oil pipeline to facilitate
shipping oil to the Pacific coast. On his 2004 visit to Beijing,
President Chávez said shifting exports to China will help
end dependency on sales to the United States.
In 2003, China bid on
concessions to Ecuador's major oil fields. The same year, the CNPC
acquired a stake in the Argentine oil and gas firm Pluspetrol,
which operates fields in northern Argentina and Peru. Although
Mexico's constitution prohibits foreign investment in Pemex, a
boost in petroleum exports is expected to address Mexico's trade
gap with the PRC. While China has no current profile in Bolivia, a
future populist president, such as Evo Morales, could find China's
presence ideologically acceptable in lieu of Western private
investment.
On the military front,
China has expanded ties through exchanges. It reportedly has direct
military-to-military relations with Venezuela, Argentina, Chile,
Peru, and Uruguay. The PRC began collaborating with Brazil on
spy satellite technology in 1999, providing rocket launch expertise
in exchange for digital optical technology that would permit high
resolution, real-time imaging. Moreover, access to Brazil's space
tracking facilities could give China the ability to attack U.S.
satellites with a variety of technologies currently under
development.
Perhaps the most
fruitful collaboration has been with dictator Fidel Castro. In
1999, China was reportedly intercepting satellite signals from
facilities in eastern Cuba. In 2000, it obtained access to a
base outside of Havana to intercept U.S. telephony. In 2001,
Russia announced that it would abandon its extensive electronic
espionage center at Lourdes. PRC personnel reportedly now occupy
it. A February 2004 agreement cloaks such operations under the
pretext of technical communications cooperation. In fact,
Radio China Inter-national signals originate from Cuba, as does
interference with U.S. East Coast radio communications and air
traffic control, according to Federal Communications
Commission complaints.[6]
Closer Ties: Boon or
Bane?
From Latin America's
perspective, expanding relations with China might seem like a good
idea. It offers the following advantages:
-
Prestige.
Dealing with
China, a major world power, elevates a small country into the big
leagues of global actors. It supplies respect for those living in
the shadow of the prosperous U.S. colossus. The novelty of frequent
high-level Chinese visits suggests that American leaders, who
visit less often, have ignored the region.
-
Deals with few
requirements. China can bargain
on the spot without a lot of caveats. Its transactions are based on
simple exchanges. Their leaders have broad authority to negotiate
foreign deals without worrying about legislative oversight, the
rule of law, or altruistic objectives. Unlike Western leaders,
Chinese leaders represent state monopolies-which mesh well with
Latin American government ownership or management of
telecommunications, mining, and energy industries. They do not need
to build up Latin American trade capacity to deal with diverse
businesses.
-
Leverage against Uncle
Sam. China's expanding
industries are a temporary boon to resource-rich Latin America.
Exports (mostly commodities) to China have grown by more than 600
percent in five years.[7] Compared with U.S.-Latin America trade
($410 billion in 2004), China's $40 billion trade with the region
might seem inconsequential.[8] However, Chinese trade and investment
gives Latin politicians and business elites, who largely
control commodities, a bargaining chip when dealing with the United
States.
However, closer ties
to China also have significant disadvantages for both Latin
America and the United States:
-
Growing trade
deficits. Latin American
leaders who sign trade and investment deals with the PRC have
noticed that China's exports are more affordable than their own
goods, which contributes to trade deficits. Chinese goods are made
by laborers who work for one-third of the wages of Latin American
counterparts and who tolerate worse working conditions. Officials
in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico have signaled their unease about
trade with such a hot competitor. In September 2005, Mexican
President Vicente Fox made it clear to visiting President Hu Jintao
that dumping electronics and clothing was unacceptable. For
every dollar that Mexico makes from exports to China, the PRC makes
$31 from exports to Mexico.[9]
-
Disinterest in
economic reform. Some analysts
believe that the commodities-based trade model used by China will
undermine the progress that Latin America has made toward
industrialization. While countries like Chile and Brazil have moved
beyond raw materials exports, others with powerful presidents or
ruling oligarchies may be tempted to fall back on plantation
economics. Income gaps between the rich and poor may widen as a
result. Moreover, such narrowly focused economies are
vulnerable to downturns in commodity prices. Some 44 percent
of Latin Americans already live below the poverty line. If these
countries fail to adopt reforms, social inequality and political
instability could depress U.S. exports to the region and increase
migration problems.
-
Scramble for
resources. To obtain
commodities, China offers tempting investments in
infrastructure. In contrast, the United States cannot offer
direct tie-ins to state industries and can only offer development
aid, now in decreasing amounts. Chinese competition may make
Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) money a less effective
incentive to democratize governments and liberalize markets.
The one-to-two year lead time from proposal to disbursement of MCA
aid gives volatile governments a chance to back away from
market-oriented performance requirements.
-
Evasion of
American-style bottleneck diplomacy. China's flexibility
counters more rigid U.S. approaches. Obtaining any kind of
assistance from the United States requires compliance on a battery
of restrictions, including observing human rights, protecting the
environment, promising not to send U.S. military personnel to
the International Criminal Court (ICC),[10] not assisting current
or former terrorists, and not using U.S.-provided equipment for any
other than its stated purpose. American commitments also depend on
legislative approval and can be reversed if the mood in the U.S.
Congress shifts.
-
Prying eyes on
America. From electronic
espionage facilities in Cuba to port facilities run by Hong
Kong billionaire Li Ka-Shing's Hutchison-Whampoa conglomerate
in Panama, China has an eye trained on the United States. U.S.
intelligence agencies are aware of this, but Washington's penchant
for focusing on one threat at a time, such as the war on terrorism,
could leave America vulnerable to Chinese industrial and military
espionage.
What the U.S. Should
Do
The United States and
China have competing interests in Latin America. Washington
would like to see its hemispheric neighbors develop into stable,
democratic, prosperous trade partners that embrace the rule of
law. Beijing sees the region as a source of raw materials, a market
for manufactured goods, and a platform for power projection. U.S.
interests probably coincide more with Latin American needs. In
contrast, China represents an opportunity to temper American
dominance with broader alliances.
Regrettably, Chinese
aid and commodity imports may buy time for state industries,
powerful presidents, and influential oligarchs. Most of all,
such commerce could delay needed reforms and industrialization
that might lift Latin America's near majority underclass out of
poverty.
America's strength is
competition, and it should influence the rules of the game in that
direction. As a good neighbor and in its own and Latin America's
interests, the United States should:
-
Accelerate free trade
agreements. Free trade agreements
have been the hallmark of U.S. policies toward the region
since the 1990s. As an inducement, America should drop its
agricultural and steel subsidies that dissuade potential
partners and cost taxpayers money. Improved U.S. trade relations
with Andean neighbors (and eventually Southern Cone countries) will
open market access for both U.S. and Latin American enterprises and
provide an outlet for industrial growth.
-
Adopt more
comprehensive relationships. Single-issue diplomacy
that emphasizes U.S. interests, such as counternarcotics, leaves
vacuums in other areas such as security assistance and trade
capacity development that other powers can fill. Plan Colombia is
working because the United States is helping Colombia to combat
terrorism, expand public safety zones, strengthen institutions,
reactivate the economy, and promote rural peace.[11]
-
Cut red tape on
assistance. This policy should be
followed to the greatest extent possible. Performance
requirements are blunt instruments that do not cover every
situation. Constraints such as annual certifications on
counternarcotics cooperation and Article 98 letters that
withhold security assistance occasionally backfire by
withdrawing support for allies in areas of mutual interest. If
Congress considers such restrictions absolutely necessary, it
should tailor them to suspend only economic aid that is not
crucial to immediate U.S. interests.
-
Press harder for
reforms and use public diplomacy. Once Latin America had
elected leaders and fledgling markets in the 1990s, U.S. support
for democracy and economic reforms declined. Although each country
is responsible for solving its own problems, external pressure
can encourage progress. U.S. public diplomacy, which is mostly
reactive toward Latin America, should be strengthened and more
supportive of U.S. development goals.
Conclusion
The United States has
become the greatest power in the world based on its tradition of
free choice. Choice goes hand-in-hand with competition, because
these keep markets vibrant and governments accountable. In a
globalized world, democracies have relations with whom they
wish and nation-competitors such as China cannot be blocked from
visiting the Western Hemisphere. However, the United States can
best look after its regional interests by cultivating closer
political and security ties with neighbors, advancing free trade,
and encouraging respect for the rule of law and liberal
economic principles among all players- including China.
Stephen
Johnson is Senior Policy Analyst for Latin America
in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies,
a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for
International Studies, at The Heritage
Foundation.
[1]See Michael
Kilian, "U.S. report warns of China sub threat," Chicago
Tribune, August 11, 2005, p. 4.
[2]Jane Bussey and
Glenn Garvin, "China Exerting Regional Influence, Analysts Warn of
Political, Strategic Challenges to U.S. in Latin America," The
Miami Herald, April 15, 2001, p. A1, at
www.latinamericanstudies.org/cuba/china-influence.htm
(October 13, 2005).
[3]Cynthia A.
Watson, Ph.D., testimony to the Subcommittee on the Western
Hemisphere, Committee on International Relations, U.S. House
of Representatives, April 6, 2005, at
wwwc.house.gov/international_relations/109/wat040605.pdf
(October 7, 2005).
[4]Xinhua News
Agency, "Beijing Liaowang Number 15," April 9, 2001, pp. 3-4,
cited in "Chinese Infrastructure Projects in Latin America,"
Intellibridge, July 19, 2004, p. 2.
[5]Bussey and
Garvin, "China Exerting Regional Influence."
[6]Albert Santoli,
"China's Strategic Reach into Latin America," testimony before the
U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, Washington,
D.C., July 21, 2005, at
www.uscc.gov/hearings/2005hearings/written_testimonies/05_07_21_22wrts/
santoli_albert_wrts.htm (September 18, 2005).
[7]Kerry Dumbaugh
and Mark P. Sullivan, "China's Growing Interest in Latin America,"
Congressional Research Service, April 20, 2005, p. 2, at
www.milnet.com/archives/China-Latin-America-7B6C19.pdf
(October 18, 2005).
[8]See U.S.
International Trade Administration, "U.S. Aggregate Foreign Trade
Data," Table 6 and Table 7, at www.ita.doc.gov/
td/industry/otea/usfth/tabcon.html (September 18,
2005).
[9]James C.
McKinley, Jr., "Mexico Builds Trade Ties with China," The New
York Times, September 13, 2005, p. A3.
[10]Signing an
Article 98 agreement-named after a section of the Rome Statute of
the International Criminal Court- with the U.S. exempts U.S.
service personnel from jurisdiction under the ICC. America's
reservations are justifiable since the court is accountable to no
one and uses legal procedures incompatible with U.S. law. Congress
and the White House approved a law that would bar security
assistance if governments refused to sign.
[11]See Stephen
Johnson, "Helping Colombia Sustain Progress Toward Peace," Heritage
Foundation Backgrounder No. 1887, October 19, 2005, at
www.heritage.org/Research/LatinAmerica/bg1887.cfm.