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15 June 2021

Where’s Biden’s China Strategy?

By Robbie Gramer and Jack Detsch

Welcome to SitRep! Robbie is jet setting off to vacation later today, so Jack will be riding solo on SitRep next week.

Alright, here’s what’s on tap for the day: The Biden administration clams up on China policy, the president takes off for Europe, and we speed-read through the wonkiest papers in Washington.

All Quiet on the Eastern Front

The first rule of the U.S. Defense Department’s China review is you do not talk about the Defense Department’s China review. The second rule of the Defense Department’s China review is you do NOT talk about the Defense Department’s China review.

At least that’s how it felt to the dingy Zoom room full of reporters who logged on to speak to a so-called “senior defense official” who proceeded to say … nothing of substance on the Pentagon’s pivot to Asia. Well, almost nothing.

What we know. The China review panel, which will feed into the Pentagon’s forthcoming recommendations to move U.S. troops around the map, calls for the agency to update education for military officers and professional development for civilians to align with the China challenge.

It will also provide Colin Kahl, the Pentagon’s newly minted top policy official, with advice on how to deter China and long-term competition. And it calls for U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to weigh in on the new warfighting strategy that’s coming from the Joint Chiefs.

What we don’t know. The Pentagon isn’t saying anything about most of the specific requests the task force had for Austin or whether it calls for moving U.S. troops to Asia at the expense of the Middle East. And they’re not saying what’s in Austin’s directive to the Defense Department on China, which also remains classified. All of that is attributable to a senior defense official, who the Pentagon said could not be identified to discuss “sensitive deliberations.”

Talk is cheap. Defense officials acknowledged there’s been a “say-do gap” between the agency talking up the China threat and actually doing anything about it. The senior defense official who spoke to reporters said the most important thing about the China review, a “down and in” look at the Pentagon’s programs (agency jargon for “navel gazing”), was righting the ship after two decades of warfare in the Middle East.

“The emphasis on the say-do gap and overhauling operational concepts and posture suggests that they’re focused on the right problems,” said Elbridge Colby, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense during the Trump administration and an architect of the 2018 National Defense Strategy (and clearly a master of Pentagon-speak).

So far, not so good. But the Pentagon is getting chewed out on Capitol Hill by lawmakers who are upset the administration’s $715 billion budget request isn’t doing enough to stick the U.S. military’s pivot foot down in Asia.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Jack Reed of Rhode Island was the latest lawmaker to join the pile-on during a Thursday hearing featuring Austin and other top defense leaders. “I am concerned that the department’s budget request takes a heavily platform-centric approach to [the Pacific Deterrence Initiative],” Reed said in his opening remarks.

And inside the Pentagon, the battle over whether to base more U.S. troops within striking distance of China’s powerful missiles and rockets has raged for months, if not years.

Still, it’s about the planning, not the plan. Jacob Stokes, a fellow at the Center for a New American Security and former national security staffer for Biden during the Obama administration, said the policy review document is important just for corralling the Pentagon’s sprawling bureaucracy to start marching in step on China.

“It’s not about necessarily the document that comes out at the end; it’s about the process of every office throughout the bureaucracy sitting down and asking themselves how does our work fit into this priority,” Stokes said.

“The overall signal is this review shows that Secretary Austin intends to infuse the China challenge throughout almost everything the department does,” he added.

Roll Call

Biden is mulling plans to tap Daniel Shapiro, former U.S. ambassador to Israel, to be a special envoy for Middle East peace talks, according to the Washington Post.

Biden also announced three new nominees for senior State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) posts, as we scooped: career diplomat Julieta Valls Noyes to be assistant secretary of state for population, refugees, and migration; Paloma Adams-Allen to be deputy USAID administrator for management and resources; and Isobel Coleman to be USAID’s deputy administrator for policy and programming.

Still missing in action. Ahead of Biden’s big trip to Europe, he has yet to announce nominees for his ambassador to the European Union, NATO, United Kingdom, France, and Germany (among many other empty ambassador posts).

Weekly Dossier

All disquiet on the Western front. The NATO summit in Brussels this week is all about showcasing alliance solidarity after four years under former U.S. President Donald Trump. But it’s not clear whether NATO is able to actually pull off that grand showcase of political unity that both European and U.S. diplomats so desperately crave in the post-Trump era, as Robbie reported.

Iran talks back on the menu. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said negotiations between world powers and Iran over its nuclear program are starting back up this weekend. Diplomacy is easier said than done this time around though, particularly ahead of Iran’s presidential elections later this month, where a hard-liner is expected to replace Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

Downsizing. France is expected to announce a reduction in the number of troops it has deployed in Mali as international counterterrorism efforts in the Sahel region of Africa have, to put it mildly, not turned into the stunning success Western officials hoped it would be.

The announcement came shortly after a second coup in Mali within a year and another quasi-coup (depending on who you ask) in Chad. France and the United States relied heavily on regional military forces, particularly Chad’s, to help their counterterrorism operations but have been hampered by those governments’ chronic political instability.

Heading off the next pandemic. Ahead of a G-7 summit this week, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called for establishing a “Global Pandemic Radar”—a new early warning system with a network of surveillance centers to prevent future pandemics.

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