Trump tariffs aimed at 'America First' are making China great again
US China Tariffs: Outgoing US ambassador Nicholas Burns advises Washington to prioritize alliances to counter China's influence. Trump's tariffs are alienating Asian nations, pushing them towards China despite concerns over its expansionist polici...

For now, Asian nations are falling in line to negotiate their way out of his tariffs. In the long term, they’ll work toward strengthening cooperation with each other. They’ll also weigh the benefits of drifting back toward the superpower that isn’t punishing them with new levies, although China’s expansionist moves in the Indo-Pacific have taken some of the shine off its allure. Washington is missing an opportunity to exploit that regional disquiet over Beijing’s actions.
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Going after rivals like China makes sense, as Trump seeks to right perceived wrongs inflicted on America by trading partners. But some of the other decisions are bewildering. Almost no country was left untouched, not even allies like Australia, India, Japan and South Korea. Alienating Indonesia, Taiwan, Vietnam, Singapore and the Philippines, which have all been useful in helping Washington combat Beijing’s rise in the region, is also counterproductive.
The damage to American credibility, as I’ve written before, won’t happen overnight but will be felt for decades. It will be seen in decisions about who to trade with, create security alliances with, buy weapons from, seek development aid from, and share intelligence with.
The US has been the biggest beneficiary of these ties. As a maritime power, it grew its economy through international trade and maintaining open sea lanes, which contributed to overall world stability, as Sally Paine, a professor at the US Naval War College, notes. Washington and its partners got richer, but also collectively safer. This has helped maintain America’s strategic edge in the Indo-Pacific, something that even US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth admitted on a recent trip to the region.
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Washington now risks losing this advantage. A recent study of over 2,000 Southeast Asians, conducted by the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute before the latest tariffs were unveiled, highlights this. It found that more people would choose the US if forced to pick between Washington and Beijing, primarily over concerns the latter is flexing its military might in places like the South China Sea. That’s a reversal from last year.

It’s plausible the responses would be quite different if those surveyed were asked the same question today. Asian governments are already weighing their options. Economic ministers of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations are meeting in Kuala Lumpur this week with the aim of developing a coordinated response (an ambition that is unlikely to happen, given Asean’s patchy history.) Countries like Malaysia and Singapore, both huge beneficiaries of globalization, have already spoken out about the damage the tariffs will do. Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong warned of the possibility of a more dangerous world akin to “the 1930s,” when “trade wars escalated into armed conflict, and eventually the Second World War.”
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Security ties usually follow economic ones, but for now no one can replace the US consumer. American household spending in 2023 reached $19 trillion, double the level of the European Union and almost three times that of China. When pushed against a wall, nations will adapt and Beijing is offering them precisely what they need to navigate a changed global trade landscape.
To protect themselves against further economic fallout, Asian nations will have no choice but to work more closely, while preserving their relationship with the US. It’s an alliance they will want to nurture despite the current unpredictability, as it has helped to lift incomes and living standards across the region.
Reaching out to other partners affected by the whims of Washington, like the European Union, would also be wise given shared grievances.
Defense and military relationships could be recalibrated, too. Some of this is already under consideration, with Japan and NATO in discussions to step up information sharing and defense-industrial cooperation.
Trump’s trade war is just beginning. With both superpowers behaving badly, countries stuck in the middle are attempting to limit their losses. Asian nations are trying to find a way to muddle through, but in the long run there will be a realignment of strategic priorities toward Beijing. What began as a battle over global trade, stands to reshape the geopolitical map in the Indo-Pacific with China at its center.
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