2025-01-01 00:00:00 Biden menghabiskan empat tahun membangun aliansi AS di Asia. Akankah mereka bertahan pada masa jabatan Trump berikutnya?
Hong Kong Berita — For Americaâs friends in Asia, the uncertainty brought by the impending return of Donald Trump to the White House is coming at a bad time.
China has been modernizing its military and nuclear arsenal while becoming increasingly aggressive in asserting territorial claims in the South China Sea and over Taiwan.
North Korea has ramped up its belligerent rhetoric and calls to develop its illegal nuclear program.
Both countries have expanded their alignment with Russia as it wages war on Ukraine, linking Asia to the shattered peace in Europe.
For decades, the US has backed the security of its allies in the region, which has more overseas active-duty American troops than anywhere else in the world.
Tens of thousands of soldiers are stationed on sprawling bases in treaty allies South Korea and Japan, countries that, like the Philippines and Australia, the US is bound to aid if they come under attack.
Marines of South Korea, right, and the US, aim their weapons near amphibious assault vehicles during a US and South Korea joint landing military exercise in Pohang, South Korea, on March 30, 2015.
Lee Jin-man/AP Those countries are now preparing for the return of an American leader who has railed against what he sees as free-riding US allies who donât pay enough for defense, sidled up to autocrats, and called for an âAmerica firstâ approach to global obligations.
Many questions about Trump are on the minds of US-aligned leaders in Asia, observers across the region say.
Will Trump ask for more defense spending than allies can afford?
Could he take an extreme step to withdraw US forces if any such demands arenât met?
Will the businessman-turned-leader cut deals with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, North Koreaâs Kim Jong Un or Russiaâs Vladimir Putin that undermine the interests of US allies?
Alternatively, could he perhaps strengthen US alliances and be a tougher opponent for Americaâs enemies?
In the shadow of this uncertainty, leaders across the region have been scrambling to forge strong ties with the notoriously mercurial incoming US commander-in-chief, whoâs known to link foreign policy to personal rapport.
Many are warily eyeing President-elect Trumpâs threat to ringfence the worldâs largest economy with 10% tariffs on all imports and upwards of 60% tariffs on goods from China, moves that could have significant economic knock-on effects across Asia.
But as Trumpâs January inauguration draws closer, governments across Asia are also facing potentially more existential questions about how Trump will manage US security relationships with friends and rivals â and stand by its allies if tested.
âIndispensable power?â After World War II, a network of US alliances was established across the world to serve as a powerful deterrent against another global war.
A major aim was to prevent more countries from becoming nuclear powers by placing them under the umbrella of the US arsenal.
In the eyes of many in Washington and across Asia, those alliances in Asia-Pacific have only become more critical as relationships in the region become more contentious.
China has expanded its security ties with NATO-adversary Russia and been accused of enabling Moscowâs war by buying up Russian exports and providing the dual-use goods needed for its defense base.
Beijing has also ramped up its intimidation of Taiwan, the self-ruling democracy it claims and has vowed to take control of, by force if necessary.
In the South China Sea, the China Coast Guard has in recent months attacked Philippine ships with water cannons and even axes, despite a major international ruling years ago denying its claim to the bulk of the strategically critical waterway.
China Coast Guard vessels fire water cannons toward a Philippine resupply vessel at Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea on March 5.
Ezra Acayan/Getty Images North Korea, meanwhile, has ramped up its threats toward South Korea and the US as it carries out illegal weapons testing.
Itâs also aiding Russiaâs war with ammunition, missiles, and â in a major, recent escalation â soldiers, US officials say.
But as Trump steps onto a more fraught and complex global stage than at the start of his first term eight years ago, observers in Asia say his focus appears to be on ratcheting up economic pressure on China rather than regional security.
Footage circulated online on Oct 18, 2024 shows North Korean troops training in Russia.
Open source intelligence (OSINT) researchers have located that this was filmed at a training range in Sergeyevka, Primorsky Krai, Russia.
In the video, a Russian soldier in uniform ñ with an insignia on his shoulder ñ commented on the troops marching before him and called them foreign reinforcements, claiming that millions of them would come to reinforce the troops, according to Kyiv Post.
The matching insignia on the soldierÃs shoulder and the gate indicate that the video was likely taken at a Russian military facility.
North Korea has started sending troops to fight with Russia in Ukraine, South Korea\'s spy agency has said as Seoul warned of a grave security threat.
The allegation comes a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he believed 10,000 North Korean soldiers could join the war, based on intelligence information.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol called for a security meeting on Friday.
According to South Korea spy agency, 1,500 troops have already arrived in Russia - with anonymous sources telling South Korean media the final figure could be closer to 12,000.
EyePress News/Reuters Related article Indoctrinated, loyal and well trained: Donât underestimate North Korean soldiers in Russia, some experts say Trumpâs âpriority is overwhelmingly on the economic relationship and on the United States not losing to China economically,â but thereâs little sign âthat he is deeply interested in the military or strategic balance in East Asia,â said Sam Roggeveen, director of the Lowy Instituteâs International Security Program in Sydney.
âEverything points in the opposite direction,â Roggeveen said.
âHeâs interested in â sure â having a strong military and defending the United States ⦠but not in this idea of America as an indispensable power which has a unique global security role.â The incoming leader and his strategists have instead repeatedly questioned whether the US was getting enough out of its alliances and whether American lives should be lost and dollars spent fighting foreign wars.
Trump shocked European leaders earlier this year by saying he would encourage Russia to do âwhatever the hell they wantâ to any NATO member country that doesnât meet the US-led allianceâs defense spending guidelines.
Preparing for Trump 2.0 Weeks before election day, Trump turned that spotlight toward Asia, claiming during an interview with Bloomberg News that were he president, South Korea would pay $10 billion a year to host US troops â about eight times more than Seoul and Washington recently agreed on.
South Korea already spends well over 2% of its gross domestic product on defense, considered by the US to be a benchmark for its allies.
Over the past decade, the country has also paid 90% of the cost for expanding Camp Humphreys, the USâ largest overseas base.
Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, is photographed in 2019.
It is the US' largest overseas military base.
Jung Yeon-je/AFP/Getty Images US soldiers participate in a 'Best Squad Competition' at Camp Humphreys in 2023 in Pyeongtaek, South Korea.
Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images But Trumpâs comments have sparked fears in Seoul that he could seek to renegotiate cost-sharing for US troops, despite a five-year agreement reached earlier this year that will raise Seoulâs spending to 8.3% more in 2026 than the previous year.
A failed renegotiation â in a worst case posed by some observers â could result in a Trump decision to downsize or withdraw US forces meant to counter the threat from its belligerent northern neighbor.
Such a scenario, or broader feelings that US commitment is waning, could also push Seoul toward developing its own nuclear arsenal â a potential first step on a slippery slope that could lead more middle powers to proliferate such weapons, experts say.
But dealings with Trump have become a lot more complicated for South Korea.
Lawmakers there voted to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol earlier this month after his shock declaration of martial law, and then weeks later voted to impeach acting president Han Duck-soo.
The country now faces months of political uncertainty at a time when observers have said building a strong leader-to-leader relationship is key.
US Army Sgt.
Terry Cook and his wife, Tyrese, pose with their five children at Camp Humphreys, July 4, 2024.
Yoonjung Seo/Berita Related article Itâs Texas 60 miles from North Korea: the US militaryâs largest overseas base âThe biggest challenge is whether Seoul and Washington will be able to communicate properly,â said Duyeon Kim, a Seoul-based adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security.
Such communication is key to âavert devastating consequences and surprises in the US-South Korea alliance that we currently assume would happen based on Trumpâs harsh rhetoric against allies,â she added.
In Japan, pundits have lamented the perceived deficiencies of Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba compared with the late Shinzo Abe, known as Asiaâs âTrump whispererâ for his finesse in getting close to the president-elect during his first term.
The key American ally in Asia is likely to stress its own sweeping changes to its defense posture since Trump was last in power.
Tokyo has veered away from the pacifist constitution imposed by the US in the aftermath of World War II, in 2022 moving to boost defense spending to about 2% of its GDP by 2027 and buy up American cruise missiles.
Countries throughout the region are also watching whether the Trump administration picks up the mantle of a key piece of Bidenâs legacy: efforts to build across Asia what State Department officials have called a âlattice workâ of interwoven US partnerships, part of the administrationâs âinvest, align, competeâ strategy to counter Beijing.
From left, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, US President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida stand for a Quadrilateral Summit family photo in Wilmington, Delaware, on September 21.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images Biden bolstered the Quad (India, Japan, Australia and the US) security group and founded the AUKUS (Australia, United Kingdom and the US) partnership that aims to equip Canberra with nuclear-powered submarines.
He also brokered significant increases in Japanâs security coordination with South Korea, the Philippines and Australia.
Trump â as an unpredictable force in the White House â could drop, maintain or even deepen these relationships.
But in the meantime, Americaâs Asian allies will look to hedge against any decline in US support.
âThe United States is now not the constant of international affairs, but rather the variable,â said Murata Koji, a professor of political science at Japanâs Doshisha University.
âThatâs why we have to expand our security (outside) the United States,â he said, pointing also to Tokyoâs need to deepen its partnership with Europe over shared concerns.
China watching closely That said, experts across the region broadly feel itâs unlikely there will be seismic changes in the US security presence under Trump, in terms of drawing down troops or tearing up alliance agreements, especially given American focus on the challenge posed by China.
âGeopolitical realities and circumstances will oblige him to try to maintain forces in the region.
The scenario that Iâm thinking of is more of renegotiating, more than outright withdrawal,â said Collin Koh, a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.
US President-elect Donald Trump gestures to China's President Xi Jinping in Beijing, China, on November 9, 2017.
Damir Sagolj/Reuters And countries will not just be considering potential downsides to Trumpâs return, Koh added, pointing to perceptions in Asia that Biden has hesitated in some of his decisions on Ukraine, complicating the situation for the besieged country.
âWith Trump coming in, there could be some renewed hope that (he) will not be like Biden in terms of crisis â maybe Trump will be more decisive,â he said.
There are concerns, however, that an expected aggressive economic policy toward China could lead to a further breakdown in communication between the US and Chinese militaries, raising the risk of confrontation between the two.
And if US allies are hurt by new American tariffs, they may have no choice but to rely more on the worldâs second-largest economy.
On the other hand, Trump also signaled some interest in working with China, implying in recent comments to CNBC that he saw at least certain aspects of his post-pandemic policy on China as âa step too far.â Then there is the question of how Trump deals with Taiwan â a potential flashpoint long seen as among the most likely triggers for a US-China conflict.
An âinsurance companyâ Biden repeatedly broke with purposeful American ambiguity to say that the US would defend Taiwan if China invaded the island.
He also approved funding for the first-ever military aid to the island as Beijing ramped up its military pressure.
In contrast, the president-elect earlier this year appeared to undercut US relations with Taipei, claiming in a Bloomberg interview that Washington was âno different than an insurance companyâ for the island and said Taiwan should pay the US for defense.
In October, he told the Wall Street Journal he would impose 150% to 200% tariffs if China went âinto Taiwan.â A Chinese fighter jet is refueled during military exercises around Taiwan on April 9, 2023.
Xinhua/AP But how the Trump administration would react in the event of a contingency remains unknown.
Trumpâs choice for secretary of state, Sen.
Marco Rubio, is a staunch advocate for the island, and his vice presidential pick JD Vance has argued that the US supplying Ukraine with air defense systems could hurt its ability to aid Taiwanâs defense if China were to attack.
That argument, however, has observers in Asia concerned.
Many in the region believe how Trump handles the war in Ukraine will send a critical message to Russiaâs partners like China, Iran and North Korea â a set of nations some in Washington fear could harden into a dangerous axis.
Those concerns may be particularly acute when it comes to China, which has likely been watching closely as it looks to its own intentions in Taiwan.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping attend a welcoming ceremony in Beijing's Tiananmen Square during Putin's state visit this past May.
Sergei Bobylov/Pool/Sputnik/AFP/Getty Images Related article As North Korea, Iran and China support Russiaâs war, is a ânew axisâ emerging?
Trump has suggested he would end the Ukraine war âin 24 hoursâ and called for an âimmediate ceasefire and negotiationsâ â a position that jives with Beijingâs stated stance on the war, which the US and its allies have criticized as being beneficial to Russia.
âI know Vladimir well.
This is his time to act.
China can help.
The World is waiting!â Trump said in a post on his social media platform Truth Social earlier this month.
And what that rhetoric means in practice could have significant ramifications for Asia.
âIf Russia is allowed to walk away with looking like itâs got a win from this ⦠that then cements this relationship (between Russia and China),â said Robert Ward, director of geo-economics and strategy at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in the UK.
âAnd Xi Jinping will be watching this very closely, watching â how credible is Western deterrence?
How credible is NATO?
How willing is the West to actually put skin in the game in a conflict â and that of course relates back to Taiwan.â Beritaâs Yoonjung Seo, Mike Valerio, and Hanako Montgomery contributed to this report.