We are now in the Eurasian Century, and while the Western press, out of habit, is still busy harping on the alleged extensive damage done on emerging markets by the dollar-centric whims of the American Fed (implying, it is still a hegemonic power), the emerging countries are actually already busy somewhere else rebuilding a new future outside of the "chaos-driven" politics of the collapsing hegemon, the bankrupt United States.
Filipinos haven't learned to simply ignore the noise though. With the de-facto loss of its economic overlordship after it was drowned by its gargantuan debts, the exiting former hegemon is still trying to cling on to power by using its military trick. The Ukraine tactic, where they invented wars to justify their presence in an area where they were not needed, is now being replicated in Asia- suddenly, there's this buzz of war between Philippines and China. As if that will even come to pass. The new VFA agreement is, of course, part of the new script of chaos planned for the Asian region. But it's obvious, the new Eurasian reality is overtaking all those delusions.
Fortunately, we are now in the Eurasian Century. A new narrative, please.
Go west, young Han
By Pepe Escobar
November 18, 2014: it's a day that should live forever in history. On
that day, in the city of Yiwu in China's Zhejiang province, 300
kilometers south of Shanghai, the first train carrying 82 containers of
export goods weighing more than 1,000 tons left a massive warehouse
complex heading for Madrid. It arrived on December 9.
Welcome to the new trans-Eurasia choo-choo train. At over 13,000
kilometers, it will regularly traverse the longest freight train route
in the world, 40% farther than the legendary Trans-Siberian Railway. Its
cargo will cross China from East to West, then Kazakhstan, Russia,
Belarus, Poland, Germany, France, and finally Spain.
You may not have the faintest idea where Yiwu is, but businessmen plying their trades across Eurasia, especially from the
Arab world, are already hooked on the city "where amazing happens!"
We're talking about the largest wholesale center for small-sized
consumer goods - from clothes to toys - possibly anywhere on Earth.
The Yiwu-Madrid route across Eurasia represents the beginning of a set
of game-changing developments. It will be an efficient logistics channel
of incredible length. It will represent geopolitics with a human touch,
knitting together small traders and huge markets across a vast
landmass. It's already a graphic example of Eurasian integration on the
go. And most of all, it's the first building block on China's "New Silk
Road", conceivably the project of the new century and undoubtedly the
greatest trade story in the world for the next decade.
Go west, young Han. One day, if everything happens according to plan
(and according to the dreams of China's leaders), all this will be yours
- via high-speed rail, no less. The trip from China to Europe will be a
two-day affair, not the 21 days of the present moment. In fact, as that
freight train left Yiwu, the D8602 bullet train was leaving Urumqi in
Xinjiang Province, heading for Hami in China's far west. That's the
first high-speed railway built in Xinjiang, and more like it will be
coming soon across China at what is likely to prove dizzying speed.
Today, 90% of the global container trade still travels by ocean, and
that's what Beijing plans to change. Its embryonic, still relatively
slow New Silk Road represents its first breakthrough in what is bound to
be an overland trans-continental container trade revolution.
And with it will go a basket of future "win-win" deals, including lower
transportation costs, the expansion of Chinese construction companies
ever further into the Central Asian "stans", as well as into Europe, an
easier and faster way to move uranium and rare metals from Central Asia
elsewhere, and the opening of myriad new markets harboring hundreds of
millions of people.
So if Washington is intent on "pivoting to Asia," China has its own plan
in mind. Think of it as a pirouette to Europe across Eurasia.
Defecting to the East?
The speed with which all of this is happening is staggering. Chinese
President Xi Jinping launched the New Silk Road Economic Belt in Astana,
Kazakhstan, in September 2013. One month later, while in Indonesia's
capital, Jakarta, he announced a 21st-century Maritime Silk Road.
Beijing defines the overall concept behind its planning as "one road and
one belt", when what it's actually thinking about is a boggling maze of
prospective roads, rail lines, sea lanes, and belts.
We're talking about a national strategy that aims to draw on the
historical aura of the ancient Silk Road, which bridged and connected
civilizations, east and west, while creating the basis for a vast set of
interlocked pan-Eurasian economic cooperation zones. Already the
Chinese leadership has green-lighted a $40 billion infrastructure fund,
overseen by the China Development Bank, to build roads, high-speed rail
lines, and energy pipelines in assorted Chinese provinces. The fund will
sooner or later expand to cover projects in South Asia, Southeast Asia,
the Middle East, and parts of Europe. But Central Asia is the key
immediate target.
Chinese companies will be investing in, and bidding for contracts in,
dozens of countries along those planned silk roads. After three decades
of development while sucking up foreign investment at breakneck speed,
China's strategy is now to let its own capital flow to its neighbors.
It's already clinched $30 billion in contracts with Kazakhstan and $15
billion with Uzbekistan. It has provided Turkmenistan with $8 billion in
loans and a billion more has gone to Tajikistan.
In 2013, relations with Kyrgyzstan were upgraded to what the Chinese
term "strategic level." China is already the largest trading partner for
all of them except Uzbekistan and, though the former Central Asian
socialist republics of the Soviet Union are still tied to Russia's
network of energy pipelines, China is at work there, too, creating its
own version of Pipelineistan, including a new gas pipeline to
Turkmenistan, with more to come.
The competition among Chinese provinces for much of this business and
the infrastructure that goes with it will be fierce. Xinjiang is already
being reconfigured by Beijing as a key hub in its new Eurasian network.
In early November 2014, Guangdong - the "factory of the world" - hosted
the first international expo for the country's Maritime Silk Road and
representatives of no less than 42 countries attended the party.
President Xi himself is now enthusiastically selling his home province,
Shaanxi, which once harbored the start of the historic Silk Road in
Xian, as a twenty-first-century transportation hub. He's made his New
Silk Road pitch for it to, among others, Tajikistan, the Maldives, Sri
Lanka, India, and Afghanistan.
Just like the historic Silk Road, the new one has to be thought of in
the plural. Imagine it as a future branching maze of roads, rail lines,
and pipelines. A key stretch is going to run through Central Asia,
Iran, and Turkey, with Istanbul as a crossroads site. Iran and Central
Asia are already actively promoting their own connections to it.
Another key stretch will follow the Trans-Siberian Railway with Moscow
as a key node. Once that trans-Siberian high-speed rail remix is
completed, travel time between Beijing and Moscow will plunge from the
current six and a half days to only 33 hours. In the end, Rotterdam,
Duisburg, and Berlin could all be nodes on this future "highway" and
German business execs are enthusiastic about the prospect.
The Maritime Silk Road will start in Guangdong province en route to the
Malacca Strait, the Indian Ocean, the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea and
the Mediterranean, ending essentially in Venice, which would be poetic
justice indeed. Think of it as Marco Polo in reverse.
All of this is slated to be completed by 2025, providing China with the
kind of future "soft power" that it now sorely lacks. When President Xi
hails the push to "break the connectivity bottleneck" across Asia, he's
also promising Chinese credit to a wide range of countries.
Now, mix the Silk Road strategy with heightened cooperation among the
BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), with
accelerated cooperation among the members of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO), with a more influential Chinese role over the
120-member Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) - no wonder there's the perception
across the Global South that, while the US remains embroiled in its
endless wars, the world is defecting to the East.
New banks and new dreams
The recent Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Beijing
was certainly a Chinese success story, but the bigger APEC story went
virtually unreported in the United States. Twenty-two Asian countries
approved the creation of an Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)
only one year after Xi initially proposed it. This is to be yet another
bank, like the BRICS Development Bank, that will help finance projects
in energy, telecommunications, and transportation. Its initial capital
will be $50 billion and China and India will be its main shareholders.
Consider its establishment a Sino-Indian response to the Asian
Development Bank (ADB), founded in 1966 under the aegis of the World
Bank and considered by most of the world as a stalking horse for the
Washington consensus. When China and India insist that the new bank's
loans will be made on the basis of "justice, equity, and transparency",
they mean that to be in stark contrast to the ADB (which remains a
US-Japan affair with those two countries contributing 31% of its capital
and holding 25% of its voting power) - and a sign of a coming new order
in Asia. In addition, at a purely practical level, the ADB won't
finance the real needs of the Asian infrastructure push that the Chinese
leadership is dreaming about, which is why the AIIB is going to come in
so handy.
Keep in mind that China is already the top trading partner for India,
Pakistan, and Bangladesh. It's in second place when it comes to Sri
Lanka and Nepal. It's number one again when it comes to virtually all
the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN),
despite China's recent well-publicized conflicts over who controls
waters rich in energy deposits in the region. We're talking here about
the compelling dream of a convergence of 600 million people in Southeast
Asia, 1.3 billion in China, and 1.5 billion on the Indian subcontinent.
Only three APEC members - apart from the US - did not vote to approve
the new bank: Japan, South Korea, and Australia, all under immense
pressure from the Obama administration. (Indonesia signed on a few days
late.) And Australia is finding it increasingly difficult to resist the
lure of what, these days, is being called "yuan diplomacy".
In fact, whatever the overwhelming majority of Asian nations may think
about China's self-described "peaceful rise", most are already shying
away from or turning their backs on a Washington-and-NATO-dominated
trade and commercial world and the set of pacts - from the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) for Europe to the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) for Asia - that would go with it.
When dragon embraces bear
Russian President Vladimir Putin had a fabulous APEC. After his country
and China clinched a massive $400 billion natural gas deal in May -
around the Power of Siberia pipeline, whose construction began this year
- they added a second agreement worth $325 billion around the Altai
pipeline originating in western Siberia.
These two mega-energy deals don't mean that Beijing will become
Moscow-dependent when it comes to energy, though it's estimated that
they will provide 17% of China's natural gas needs by 2020. (Gas,
however, makes up only 10% per cent of China's energy mix at present.)
But these deals signal where the wind is blowing in the heart of
Eurasia. Though Chinese banks can't replace those affected by Washington
and EU sanctions against Russia, they are offering a Moscow battered by
recent plummeting oil prices some relief in the form of access to
Chinese credit.
On the military front, Russia and China are now committed to large-scale
joint military exercises, while Russia's advanced S-400 air defense
missile system will soon enough be heading for Beijing. In addition,
for the first time in the post-Cold War era, Putin recently raised the
old Soviet-era doctrine of "collective security" in Asia as a possible
pillar for a new Sino-Russian strategic partnership.
Chinese President Xi has taken to calling all this the "evergreen tree
of Chinese-Russian friendship" - or you could think of it as Putin's
strategic "pivot" to China. In either case, Washington is not exactly
thrilled to see Russia and China beginning to mesh their strengths:
Russian excellence in aerospace, defense technology, and heavy equipment
manufacturing matching Chinese excellence in agriculture, light
industry, and information technology.
It's also been clear for years that, across Eurasia, Russian, not
Western, pipelines are likely to prevail. The latest spectacular
Pipelineistan opera - Gazprom's cancellation of the prospective South
Stream pipeline that was to bring yet more Russian natural gas to Europe
- will, in the end, only guarantee an even greater energy integration
of both Turkey and Russia into the new Eurasia.
So long to the unipolar moment
All these interlocked developments suggest a geopolitical tectonic shift
in Eurasia that the American media simply hasn't begun to grasp. Which
doesn't mean that no one notices anything. You can smell the incipient
panic in the air in the Washington establishment. The Council on
Foreign Relations is already publishing laments about the possibility
that the former sole superpower's exceptionalist moment is "unraveling".
The US-China Economic and Security Review Commission can only blame the
Chinese leadership for being "disloyal", adverse to "reform", and an
enemy of the "liberalization" of their own economy.
The usual suspects carp that upstart China is upsetting the
"international order", will doom "peace and prosperity" in Asia for all
eternity, and may be creating a "new kind of Cold War" in the region.
From Washington's perspective, a rising China, of course, remains the
major "threat" in Asia, if not the world, even as the Pentagon spends
gigantic sums to keep its sprawling global empire of bases intact. Those
Washington-based stories about the new China threat in the Pacific and
Southeast Asia, however, never mention that China remains encircled by
US bases, while lacking a base of its own outside its territory.
Of course, China does face titanic problems, including the pressures
being applied by the globe's "sole superpower". Among other things,
Beijing fears threats to the security of its sea-borne energy supply
from abroad, which helps explain its massive investment in helping
create a welcoming Eurasian Pipelineistan from Central Asia to Siberia.
Fears for its energy future also explain its urge to "escape from
Malacca" by reaching for energy supplies in Africa and South America,
and its much-discussed offensive to claim energy-rich areas of the East
and South China seas, which Beijing is betting could become a "second
Persian Gulf", ultimately yielding 130 billion barrels of oil.
On the internal front, President Xi has outlined in detail his vision of
a "results-oriented" path for his country over the next decade. As road
maps go, China's "must-do" list of reforms is nothing short of
impressive. And worrying about keeping China's economy, already the
world's number one by size, rolling along at a feverish pitch, Xi is
also turbo-charging the fight against corruption, graft, and waste,
especially within the Communist Party itself.
Economic efficiency is another crucial problem. Chinese state-owned
enterprises are now investing a staggering $2.3 trillion a year - 43% of
the country's total investment - in infrastructure. Yet studies at
Tsinghua University's School of Management have shown that an array of
investments in facilities ranging from steel mills to cement factories
have only added to overcapacity and so actually undercut China's
productivity.
Xiaolu Wang and Yixiao Zhou, authors of the academic paper "Deepening
Reform for China's Long-term Growth and Development", contend that it
will be difficult for China to jump from middle-income to high-income
status - a key requirement for a truly global power. For this, an
avalanche of extra government funds would have to go into areas like
social security/unemployment benefits and healthcare, which take up at
present 9.8% and 15.1% of the 2014 budget - high for some Western
countries but not high enough for China's needs.
Still, anyone who has closely followed what China has accomplished over
these past three decades knows that, whatever its problems, whatever the
threats, it won't fall apart. As a measure of the country's ambitions
for economically reconfiguring the commercial and power maps of the
world, China's leaders are also thinking about how, in the near future,
relations with Europe, too, could be reshaped in ways that would be
historic.
What about that "harmonious community"?
At the same moment that China is proposing a new Eurasian integration,
Washington has opted for an "empire of chaos", a dysfunctional global
system now breeding mayhem and blowback across the Greater Middle East
into Africa and even to the peripheries of Europe.
In this context, a "new Cold War" paranoia is on the rise in the US,
Europe, and Russia. Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who knows a
thing or two about Cold Wars (having ended one), couldn't be more
alarmed. Washington's agenda of "isolating" and arguably crippling
Russia is ultimately dangerous, even if in the long run it may also be
doomed to failure.
At the moment, whatever its weaknesses, Moscow remains the only power
capable of negotiating a global strategic balance with Washington and
putting some limits on its empire of chaos. NATO nations still follow
meekly in Washington's wake and China as yet lacks the strategic clout.
Russia, like China, is betting on Eurasian integration. No one, of
course, knows how all this will end. Only four years ago, Vladimir
Putin was proposing "a harmonious economic community stretching from
Lisbon to Vladivostok", involving a trans-Eurasian free trade agreement.
Yet today, with the US, NATO, and Russia locked in a Cold War-like
battle in the shadows over Ukraine, and with the European Union
incapable of disentangling itself from NATO, the most immediate new
paradigm seems to be less total integration than war hysteria and fear
of future chaos spreading to other parts of Eurasia.
Don't rule out a change in the dynamics of the situation, however. In
the long run, it seems to be in the cards. One day, Germany may lead
parts of Europe away from NATO's "logic", since German business leaders
and industrialists have an eye on their potentially lucrative commercial
future in a new Eurasia. Strange as it might seem amid today's war of
words over Ukraine, the endgame could still prove to involve a
Berlin-Moscow-Beijing alliance.
At present, the choice between the two available models on the planet
seems stark indeed: Eurasian integration or a spreading empire of chaos.
China and Russia know what they want, and so, it seems, does
Washington. The question is: What will the other moving parts of
Eurasia choose to do?
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