- The Washington Times - Tuesday, December 6, 2022

President Biden’s foreign policy fumbles have “weakened America on the world stage,” a key Republican House Foreign Affairs Committee member said Tuesday. He warned that administration officials have moved to “coddle” China despite the regime’s clear determination to “replace the United States as the globe’s sole superpower.”

Ohio Rep. Steve Chabot, the ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, Central Asia and Nonproliferation, said the incoming GOP House majority plans a more robust oversight over foreign policy, including a new Select Committee on China, a rival he said seems to be bent on waging a “new Cold War” against America and its allies.

“After decades of inactions, it’s time to reevaluate our basic approach,” Mr. Chabot told “The Washington Brief,” a monthly virtual event series hosted by The Washington Times Foundation. “Unfortunately, the Biden administration has taken one step back for every two steps forward and congressional Democrats have done nothing to hold them to account.”

House Democrats in particular “have done practically nothing relative to China,” the Ohio Republican contended, noting the Democratic majority held just one full Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on China over the past two years. “That’s about to change, I believe, under the new Republican majority,” he said.

Mr. Chabot more broadly ripped into the Biden foreign policy record. “[The] administration in my view has weakened America on the world stage,” he said, “from the bungled pullout in Afghanistan, to the failed attempts to renegotiate the failed Iran deal, the mishandling of the relationship with the Saudis and the weak approach to Latin America. Trying to purchase oil from Venezuela, for example, because of our energy policies here, [has] made us more vulnerable across the globe, and our allies as well.”

While he said Mr. Biden has done a “tolerable job” backing Ukraine against Russia’s invasion, Mr. Chabot asserted the administration should be more focused. “Every move they take seems to be too late and too weak in my view,” he said.

Soft on China

The administration’s Indo-Pacific strategy in particular needs clarity, said Mr. Chabot.

“Their strategy keeps lurching from meaningful competition with China to what can only be described as a desire, I think, to coddle the [Chinese Communist Party] in many ways,” he said. “This is particularly evident in the mood we’ve seen since the last summit between the Biden administration and [Chinese President Xi Jinping], and especially with respect to the recent [COVID-19] protests in China.”

Mr. Chabot, who has held a House Foreign Affairs Committee seat since 1994, said Washington has long “attempted to play nice with the [ruling Communist Party] in hopes that incorporating it into the post-World War II order would push [China] to become responsible global stakeholders.”

“Those hopes were at least overly optimistic,” he said. “The communists in Beijing were never interested in joining our system. “

“We need to get our military house in order,” Mr. Chabot said, adding that “our military posture is not ready quite frankly for a fight with the CCP if we want to absolutely make sure that we would prevail.”

He also stressed the importance of the U.S.-Taiwan alliance, saying the island democracy’s fate in the face of growing Chinese threats “should be the top concern of our war planners right now because of all the potential flashpoints around the globe it’s the one that’s most likely to go off and it would in all likelihood draw the United States in.”

The time has come, Mr. Chabot said, for the U.S. to move away from long-held “strategic ambiguity” on China’s claim of sovereignty over Taiwan and the question of whether American forces would fight for the island if Beijing invades, accusing Mr. Biden and his aides of sending mixed messages.

“The U.S. has kept the peace in the Taiwan Strait for 40 years because the Chinese couldn’t do anything about it due to our decisive military superiority. Now our superiority is by no means clear,” he said. “If we aren’t crystal clear, there’s a possibility that Beijing could miscalculate and start a war that drags us in.”

Mr. Chabot said the administration “has had basically no answer” to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s “stepped up provocations,” that have featured increasingly aggressive waves of ballistic missile tests this year.

“With the administration’s feckless approach,” he said, the U.S. is “sleepwalking into a crisis.”

“Kim’s provocations must be met with a firm response,” said Mr. Chabot, who called on the administration to “tighten sanctions even more,” while also finding clear-cut ways to pressure China — North Korea’s primary ally — to pressure the Kim regime.

The administration could sanction Chinese entities doing business with North Korea and push to re-open talks on basing enhanced U.S. defense systems in both South Korea and Japan — talks Mr. Chabot said would “get China’s attention” and “might work to put pressure on China to put pressure on North Korea.”

Without more effective U.S. policy, there will be “an increasingly nuclearized Korean Peninsula and a dominant China across the region and potentially, ultimately across the globe,” he said.

The Washington Brief’s regular panel includes former CIA official and longtime U.S. diplomatic adviser Joseph DeTrani and Alexandre Mansourov, an adjunct professor at Georgetown University’s Center for Security Studies. Former Congressman Dan Burton, an Indiana Republican who long served on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, also joined Tuesday’s discussion.

Mr. Burton expressed concern about the possible spread of communist ideology among U.S. democratic allies in Asia, specifically Japan, pointing to the ongoing blowback surrounding former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s assassination in July. Abe had long warned of China’s continued push for dominance in the region.

“The Communist Party in Japan seems to be, from what I’ve heard, trying to take advantage of [Abe’s] assassination to reach out and have closer ties to China,” said Mr. Burton. “One thing we don’t need right now is to have the government of Japan undermined by China or the [domestic] communists in Japan.”

Mr. Chabot agreed.

“As far as Abe and the Communist Party in Japan, I think you’re right, it is something for us to be aware of and concerned about and vigilant about.”

He said there were parallels to the Japanese experience in the Chinese push for influence on U.S. college campuses, using disinformation campaigns and money to push the Chinese government line.

“That’s something else that hopefully this select committee will be looking at and getting more information and more attention out there to the public,” Mr. Chabot said.

• Guy Taylor can be reached at gtaylor@washingtontimes.com.

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