Sino-U.S. Strategic Competition in the Asia-Pacific: Omnidirectional Hedging of Traditional Middle Powers

Maheera Munir, Aiysha Safdar
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Abstract

The strategic landscape of the Asia-Pacific is now shaped by the competition between China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the United States’ Free and Open Indo-Pacific strategy. The Sino-U.S. strategic competition has greatly impacted the strategic outlook and foreign policies of middle powers in the region. This paper argues that the Asia-Pacific middle powers are functioning along the lines of omnidirectional hedging which is relatively a new concept in the IR discourse. Omnidirectional hedging entails maximisation of strategic space and avoiding entrapment in the great power rivalry through diplomatic, economic and security diversification. Through qualitative analysis, this research observes that the traditional middle powers ─ Japan, India, and Australia ─ are now largely focusing on multilateralism, minilateral alliances, free trade agreements, infrastructure investments, maritime security cooperation and new defence agreements. Such a foreign policy behaviour is paving way for a closely knitted middle-power network in the region to prevent great powers from engaging in direct confrontation which would threaten regional peace and stability.
中美在亚太地区的战略竞争:传统中间力量的全方位对冲
中国的 "一带一路 "倡议(BRI)与美国的 "自由开放的印太战略"(Free and Open Indo-Pacific)之间的竞争塑造了亚太地区的战略格局。中美战略竞争极大地影响了该地区中等国家的战略前景和外交政策。本文认为,亚太地区的中等强国正在按照全方位对冲的思路运作,而全方位对冲在国际关系论述中是一个相对较新的概念。全方位对冲要求最大限度地扩大战略空间,通过外交、经济和安全多元化避免陷入大国竞争。通过定性分析,本研究发现,传统的中等强国--日本、印度和澳大利亚--目前主要关注多边主义、小多边联盟、自由贸易协定、基础设施投资、海上安全合作和新的防务协定。这种外交政策行为正在为该地区建立一个紧密的中等国家网络铺平道路,以防止大国直接对抗,威胁地区和平与稳定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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