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16 hours ago FEATURED | The New Strategic Environment of the Trans-Pacific : A U.S.
Perspective by Dr. R. Evan Ellis

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This article is translated into English by the author which has been earlier published at Poltica Externa
[http://politicaexterna.com.br/] , a leading Brazilian Foreign Policy Journal in Portuguese Language.
By Dr. R. Evan Ellis
Introduction
In an April 2015 speech, U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter affirmed the significance of the trade regime that
prevails in and between Asia and the Western Hemisphere, calling the success of the Trans-Pacific Partnership
agreement (TPP) as important for the U.S. as having another aircraft carrier.[1] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%
20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn1]
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The U.S. is not alone in recognizing the strategic importance of the Pacific. The Peoples Republic of China (PRC) is
similarly maneuvering to assure that the organizations and rules for commerce between Asia and the Western
Hemisphere are as favorable as possible to its own interests, proposing a new Free Trade Area of the Asia
Pacific (FTAAP) at the November 2014 Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) leaders summit in Beijing, as
an alternative to the TPP.

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22nd APEC Summit at Beijing, November 2014
PHOTO COURTESY: Straits Times

Nor is the contest over the TPP and the alternative FTAAP the only front in the struggle to define the regime that prevails
in the Pacific. In January 2015, the PRC hosted a summit with the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States
(CELAC), lavishing promises of loans for, investment in, and trade with, member states of the organization. The ChinaCELAC summit parallels the approach used by the PRC in engaging the nations of Africa through the Forum on ChinaAfrica Cooperation (FOCAC), established in October 2000. In both cases, its region-level multilateral engagement
focuses on distribution of gifts to individual regimes from a benevolent PRC, grouping those countries on Chinas terms,
yet relating to each separately.

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The re-emergence of the PRC as a global power has not only increased economic, political, and other interactions
across the Pacific, but as the struggles over TPP, FTAAP and the China-CELAC forum suggest, it has also increased the
strategic importance to the norms, rules, and structures that govern those interactions. For Latin America and the
Caribbean, as well as for the United States, Canada, and the countries of Asia, the ability to prosper in the evolving
global economy, and to a degree, their position as nations in the global order, are strongly affected by the regime of
formal and informal norms, rules and governance structures that prevail in the area encompassed by Asia and the
Americas. Ensuring that this regime is characterized by rule of law, free trade, protection of intellectual property, and
democratic governance is a strategic imperative, not only for the United States, but also for the rest of the community of
nations on both sides of the Pacific which aspire to an equal opportunity to prosper from their own achievements.
The struggle for the future regime of the Pacific is not going well, in part, because the U.S. has only focused on half of
the problem. Although the Obama administrations much discussed re-balance to the Pacific technically includes the
Western Hemisphere as part of the area of focus, in reality, attention has been predominantly directed to Asia.[2]
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The continued growth and domestic stability of the PRC, and the sustained rule of the Chinese Communist Party will play
an important role in shaping the strategic landscape in the Pacific, as will the interaction of China with its Asian
neighbors, including strategic projects such as the China-funded Silk Road, and institutions such as the new Asia
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).
Nonetheless, on the other side of the Pacific as well, the political and institutional orientation of the Western
Hemisphere, and the policies of its governments regarding trans-Pacific trade and investment, associated agreements
and organizations, and the posture toward foreign participation in domestic markets, will play a significant role in defining
the formal institutions and rules, and the informal norms of governance that prevail in the Pacific.
The relationship of the Americas with Asia brings into play multiple levels of identity in both regions, as well as
competing interests and perspectives regarding how the Americas can most effectively engage with Asia and the rest of
the global economy.

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Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas (ALBA)

[http://albainfo.org/]

At the hemispheric level the Americas are currently divided between competing vision for engaging with Asia and the
global economy. One, loosely represented by the U.S., Canada and the nations of the Pacific Alliance, emphasizes free
markets, improving efficiencies and expanding synergies between member states. The other, represented by the
regimes of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas (ALBA), Argentina, and to some degree, Brazil, emphasizes the role
of the state in brokering international commerce, regulating access to markets, redressing social inequities, and driving

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development. Such differences echo debates within the region during the Cold War, regarding how to engage with the
global economy, although the current discourse is as much about China, as about the United States, complicating the
traditional alignment between economic ideology and foreign relations preferences among groups in the region.
On the Asian side of the Pacific, as China relates to Latin America and the Caribbean in the context of such divisions and
complexity in the Western Hemisphere, it has adeptly alternated between a more market-oriented style of engagement,
and state-to-state interactions, as appropriate to the posture of its partner.
It has also advanced its strategic objectives in the Western Hemisphere through an adept combination of multilateral and
bilateral engagement. Through its multilateral relationship with CELAC, for example, the PRC conducts quasi-political
engagements with the region, including nations that do not diplomatically recognize it, such as Paraguay, most of Central
American and about half of the Caribbean. Indeed, the Dominican Republic, which currently does not have diplomatic
relations with the PRC, will formally represent CELAC to the PRC in 2017 when it holds the presidency of the
organization 2017.

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The China-CELAC relationship further allows the PRC to facilitate work for its construction and other companies in the
region through multilateral development funds such as the $35 billion fund for the region that Chinese President Xi
announced in Fortaleza, Brazil during his July 2014 trip to the region,[3] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%
20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn3]
or
the
BRICS bank, initially capitalized at $50 billion. Yet at the same time, the PRC also courts each of the regions
governments individually, leveraging the size of the Chinese economy, the enormous quantities of money it has available
to lend or invest, and its ability to coordinate between government, companies, and financial institutions, in order to
secure commitments and terms advantageous to its interests.
Beyond the PRC as well, the activities of nations such as Japan, Korea, Russia, and India in Latin America and the
Caribbean are also relevant, and will play an important role in coming years in shaping the system of governance that
emerges across the Pacific. The interests of these Asian actors in the region are, at times, competing, and at times
complimentary, creating complex dynamics within the Western Hemisphere, as well as interesting options for multilateral
strategic partnerships.
Latin Americas Competing Visions for Engaging with Asia
By contrast to the debates in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s and 1970s regarding the regions
participation in the international system as a vehicle for development, the region today is not divided over the question of
whether to engage economically and politically with Asia, so much as how to do so.[4]
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As noted previously, in engaging with Asia and the rest of the world economy, a subset of Latin American nations loosely
represented by the Pacific Alliance (Mexico, Colombia, Peru and Chile), have chosen to build their engagement strategy
around free markets, transparency, and the rule of law. The approach leverages relatively strong institutions in those
nations, and seeks to interact with countries like the PRC in a fashion beneficial to member states by eliminating
impediments to the free flow of goods, capital, people, and information between member states. The achievements of the
Pacific Alliance approach to date include the elimination of tariffs on 92% of trade between member countries, the
creation of common stock market between Colombia, Chile, Peru and Mexico (MILA) and coordination between trade
promotion activities in consulates abroad. Future plans include greater and more efficient flow of intellectual capital
between members through programs such as student exchanges and reciprocal acceptance of university degrees in
member nations.
The concrete advances achieved by the Pacific Alliance in the four years since the April 2011 Lima declaration
committing to form the organization, has generated considerable enthusiasm throughout the region and beyond. In
addition to its four members, 32 states have associated themselves with the Alliance as observers, including Asian states
Australia, New Zealand, China, Japan, and South Korea. The Alliance has also expressed an interest in establishing
relationships with other multilateral organizations, including the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and
Mercosur.[5]
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Yet despite its achievements, and international interest in the organization, there are some causes for concern regarding
the organizations continuing advance. In April 2014, Colombias constitutional court ruled that the manner in which the
nation had entered the Pacific Alliance was not constitutional.[6] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%
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There has been little
discussion on how the ruling affects the nations current alliance membership, and while the ruling theoretically permits
Colombia to re-join the Alliance through constitutionally acceptable procedures, the issue has not yet been resolved.
Beyond Colombia, Costa Rica, which seemed to be on the fast track to move from observer to full alliance member, has
not progressed as quickly as hoped in adapting its laws and regulations, or completing the other steps required to
formalize the process.
The focus of the most recent summit of the Pacific Alliance, in June 2014 in Punto Mita, Mexico, was developing external
ties
to
the
Pacific,
rather
than
deepening
integration
between
member
states,
per
se.[7]
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20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn7] Yet it was notable that the meeting lacked announcements of significant progress

on

the

deepening

of

cooperation

between

members,

as

has

been

the

case

in

prior

summits.[8]

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On the other hand, candidate Pacific Alliance member Panama has moved closer to formally joining the Alliance; in April
2015, the countrys legislature, and that of Mexico, ratified a free trade accord between the two, meaning that Panama
now has the trade agreements with all alliance members required to join the block.
The obstacles in the advance of the Alliance, also include the changing internal politics of its members. The government
of Michelle Bachelet in Chile, who returned to power in March 2014, is based on a much more left-of-center political
coalition than her Concertacin government during her 2006-2010 term in office. The parties in her new coalition are
arguably more reluctant to embrace what are seen as neoliberal associations, including the Pacific Alliance and TransPacific Partnership. Complicating matters, her government has also been distracted by a bribery scandal.[9]

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In Peru, the government of Ollanta Humala has similarly been bogged down a
national polemic surrounding revelations of eavesdropping by its intelligence organization, the DINI, on politicians,
journalists, and business leaders, among others.[10] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%

20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn9]

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By contrast to the Pacific Alliance, as noted previously, the governments of ALBA, Argentina, and to an extent, Brazil,
have pursued a model of engagement with Asia that places a greater emphasis on the role of the state, vis--vis the
market. While there is a diversity of policy orientations within this group on engagement with Asia, a pattern may be
observed regarding the orientation of these governments that gives the state a relatively greater role than that given by
the Pacific Alliance block, in three areas: (1) protecting domestic interests from foreign economic competition, (2)
regulating and channeling foreign investment and financing in the country, and (3) awarding public contracts.
The regimes of ALBA and Argentina have been particularly active in channeling Chinese credit and investment into the
country through deals in which the state plays a leading role. Since 2005, such loans to these governments have
accounted for 75% of the $119 billion lent to the region by Chinese policy banks such as China Development Bank and
China Ex-Im bank.[11] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20TransPacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn11] Venezuela and Ecuador have been particularly active in
securing such financing, using loans from China in state-to-state deals to fund infrastructure projects and purchase
Chinese goods, including work on Ecuadoran hydroelectric facilities such as Coca Coda Sinclair, Sopladora,
Delsitanisagua, and Minas San Francisco, [12] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%
20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn12] as well as the 2 million Haier
appliances bought by Venezuelas government to be sold at a discount to the poor (largely supporters of the regime)
during the run-up to the 2012 elections. [13] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%
20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn13]

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While not pursuing the populist socialist model used by Venezuela, Argentina and Brazil have also given the state a
leading role in engaging with the PRC, including currency swaps between Argentine and Chinese banks, secured
through state-to-state negotiations in 2009 and 2014, as well as the $30 billion state-negotiated China-Brazil currency
swap of 2013.
In addition, the Brazilian and Chinese governments have negotiated multiple loans from Chinese banks for the Brazilian
state oil company Petrobras, including a $10 billion deal in 2009, and $3.5 billion in 2015 to help rescue the company
from the liquidity crisis brought on by the deepening Petrobras bribery scandal.[14] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%
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In Argentina, the government of Cristina Fernandez has played a high-profile role in negotiating with the PRC for a
package for financing and building the Jose Cepernic and Nestor Kirchner hydroelectric facilities on the Santa Cruz
River, as well as for upgrading the Belgrano-Cargas railroad system, which the Argentine state is in the process of
nationalizing. [15] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%
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Both Argentina and Brazil, as well as Venezuela and Ecuador, have also leveraged state control of the oil sector to
negotiate access for Chinese companies, and both have been notable in their use of tariff barriers and other legal
restrictions to protect domestic producers from competition by Chinese (and other foreign) products.

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From a Chinese perspective, despite the challenges of dealing with the protectionism of Argentina and Brazil and the
dysfunctionality of Venezuela, the state-to-state approach to engagement has served the PRC well in securing deals on
advantageous terms for Chinese companies, particularly in the more personality-driven, weakly-institutionalized ALBA
states. It has allowed the PRC to leverage its strengths in coordinating the efforts of its ministries, banks and companies
to secure work commitments and market access without the burdensome requirements of Western-style competitive
bidding. It has done so, in part, through a less-than-transparent process of providing targeted benefits to the government
elites who have administrative control or influence over the contracts and other benefits to be given to the Chinese.[16]
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In the process, such state-to-state deals have also reinforced the political power of those Latin American leaders who
engage in them. In part, this is because of the discretion afforded to leaders in weakly institutionalized states such as
Venezuela to guide who receives the lucrative intermediation and support contracts surrounding the deal, and by

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providing a funding stream from the PRC that frees such leaders from going to their own legislatures for funds, or to
international institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or Inter-american Development Bank (IADB),
which typically impose more invasive oversight requirements.
If the nature of statism pursued by Brazil and Argentina toward the PRC is substantially different from that of the ALBA
states, it is also important to recognize that not all of the ALBA countries have engaged with the PRC with equal fervor.
The Bolivian government of Evo Morales, for example, has been relatively reluctant to commit to major state-led deals
with the PRC, with Bolivias state petroleum firm YPFB maintaining Chinese firms at the margins of the countrys gas and
oil sector. Moreover, a number of projects thought to have been earmarked for PRC-based firms, such as the $900
million Rositas hydroelectric facility,[17] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%
20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn17] have not been awarded to them.
Of the ALBA states, Ecuador and Nicaraguas relationships with China and other Asian actors arguably have the greatest
potential to shape the emerging regime of the Pacific. Not only does each have a Pacific coastline, but each is uniquely
positioned to redefine ALBA through its action or inaction, as the political and economic collapse of the blocks former
leading member Venezuela plays itself out.
For Ecuador, the potential for such influence derives from of President Correas intellectual and strategic orientation, in
combination with the relative effectiveness with which he has employed funds from the PRC in Ecuadoran infrastructure
projects.[18]
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Nicaragua, for its part, despite not having diplomatic relations with the PRC, stands poised to leverage Chinese
companies and institutions for the possible $50-$70 billion trans-continental canal that would transform the country and
the region. Beyond the money flows and associated political leverage afforded to Nicaragua through such a waterway,
the existence of the canal and its governance, if built, would factor into the calculations of virtually all Western
Hemisphere and trans-Pacific maritime logistics going forward.
As with the Pacific Alliance, influence of the ALBA approach to engagement with the Pacific to shape the emerging
community of the Pacific is subject to considerable uncertainty. As noted previously, the blocks leading member and
source of funding is in a process of financial and political implosion. Bolivias leader Evo Morales has, to date, played
more of a participatory, than a leadership role in ALBA, and his ability to substantially influence the block, let alone the
regime that prevails in the Pacific, from his land-locked country is untried, at best. Ecuadors President Correa, while
astute, is reportedly seen as arrogant by some of his peers. In Nicaragua, the trans-oceanic canal upon which the future
of the country and the Sandinista regime arguably rests, may be on the brink of unraveling, with the Canals international
representative, Ronald McLean formalizing his resignation in April 2015,[19] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%
20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn19] and with
the date established by the project plan for beginning major excavation already well past without evidence that such work
will commence.[20] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%
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In addition to the aforementioned governments, the activities of Argentina and Brazil will also play an important role in
shaping the regime that emerges across the Pacific. Yet the posture of each is highly uncertain. Argentina faces
national elections in October in which a victory by the opposition could reorient or even halt major state-coordinated
initiatives such as the Belgrano-Cargas railway and the Nestor Kirchner and Jose Cepernic hydroelectric projects. In
Brazil, the Petrobras bribery scandal opens the door to significant change in management of the oil sector, and possibly
even impeachment of the current Rousseff government, with an associated paralysis in, followed by significant changes
to the orientation of Brazils government.

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With respect to MERCOSUR, to which virtually all of the statist actors discussed in this work are bound, members of the
Pacific Alliance have expressed interest in greater collaboration with the organization. Doing so would potentially the
Pacific Alliance greater leverage as it engages with the countries of Asia, but it could also distract the alliance with interblock negotiations, and dilute the policy consensus that has enabled its rapid advances to date. Nor is it clear whether
MERCOSUR can engage with the Pacific Alliance as a block. Internal differences between members recently blocked
the culmination of a free trade agreement between MERCOSUR and Europe,[21] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%
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and the smaller states of the organization, Paraguay and Uruguay, have signaled interest in engaging with the Pacific
Alliance on their own.
At the trans-regional level, another important battleground shaping the regime of the Pacific is the BRICS. In addition to
the organizations political project to project itself as a spokesman for the developing world, the organizations new bank,
announced during Chinese President Xis July 2014 trip to Latin America, has the potential to reshape the system of
financial governance in the Pacific and beyond. The level of transparency and the criteria that it applies in awarding and
managing its loan portfolio, and the manner in which it interacts with established institutions such as the World Bank,
International Monetary Fund, Inter-American Development Bank, and Caribbean Development Bank, will be critical in
determining its impact on the regime of the trans-Pacific.
Finally, the regime that dominates the Pacific will also be influenced by which multilateral organizations prevail in
representing the Americas as a whole. Although few of the regions diplomats openly acknowledge it, the region is
engaged in a superficially friendly, yet crucial struggle pitting the Organization of American States (which has historically
represented the region), against UNASUR and CELAC, which define the region in a way that explicitly excludes the
United States and Canada.
While CELAC currently has very little institutional capability, the PRC has chosen to abet it in this struggle by using the
organization as its principal vehicle for conducting multilateral diplomacy with the Americas. The China-CELAC summits,
like those of FOCAC with Africa, have become vehicles for the PRC to unveil and celebrate large region-wide investment
funds, such as the previously-mentioned $35 billion Latin America loan fund, creating the possibility that Chinese funding

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could be instrumental in giving CELAC an institutional identity that allows it, rather than the more democratic and fully
representative OAS, to become the principal mechanism for multilateral governance in the Americas.
The Shadow of Chinas Future
While the regime that prevails across the Pacific will be shaped by Latin America to a greater extent than is commonly
acknowledged, the giant dragon in the room[22] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%
20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn22] is how the current
deceleration of growth in the PRC, and the political reforms, the Communist party rectification, and the rest of the anticorruption campaign underway in that country play out.

[http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-6lRG5iSVty8/VXpqO8n6sI/AAAAAAAABlE/Qvz2dj8_4Z8/s1600/china-latam--trade-usd-bn-2003-2013f.jpg]

First, slowing growth in the PRC may weaken its appeal for Latin American businessmen and politicians as a lucrative
market and purchaser of the regions commodities. Decreasing demand from the PRC will likely further depress
commodity prices, lowering net revenues received by Latin America for their exports, thus hurting growth in those
economies of the region most dependent on commodity exports to the PRC, including both Pacific Alliance members
such as Peru and Chile, as well as ALBA members Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia, and to some degree, Brazil.
In such a scenario, as commercially viable opportunities for infrastructure, housing and other construction projects in the
PRC become more scarce, and as Chinese banks come under pressure to offset non-performing loans in the PRC with
commercially viable ones abroad, Chinese banks, construction firms, and even manufacturers could become more
aggressive in seeking overseas markets such as in Latin America and the Caribbean.
If, on the other hand, the Chinese economy collapses, perhaps through a reinforcing cycle of economic hardship and
political unrest,[23] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%
20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn23] the impact on Latin America would be very different. PRC
investment in, and loans to Latin America could decline dramatically, compounded by a fall in the value of Chinese
commodities purchased from the region, which would likely extend to the agricultural sector. Brazil and Argentina would
be hard-hit by simultaneous decreases in the value of their agricultural, mining, and petroleum exports. Yet the most
adverse effects would likely occur in the regimes of ALBA, since they have come to depend on the PRC, with few other
alternatives, to finance their government programs, as well as to purchase their commodity exports, and invest in their
extraction. Such a shock, as Venezuela teeters on the verge of collapse and the Nicaragua Canal project falls apart,

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could precipitate the collapse of ALBA as a political project and generate a fundamental reorientation of economic
ideology across the Americas on the scale of that which occurred at the end of the Cold War.
Recommendations for the U.S.
The United States alone cannot, and should not try to prevent the PRC or other extra-hemispheric actors from
developing relationships with the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean. Yet the ability to prosper in the evolving
world order of the 21st Century, for the U.S. and other countries desiring an even playing field to prosper from the fruits of
their own efforts, requires that the system of formal and informal governance that prevails across the Pacific is dominated
by rule of law, free markets, and transparent and fair competition. Such a regime will prevent large states such as the
PRC, with the ability to coordinate government, commercial, and financial sectors, from exploiting that size and
coordination to gain access to the markets, technology and resources of the other states in an unfair manner, on
unbalanced terms.

[http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-1eMf3WMc3Jk/VXpssaL0XFI/AAAAAAAABlU/iyd8lyGOHJ8/s1600/Balance-of-Power14.png]

The rules, and the weights of each actor in the institutions of that trans-Pacific regime will almost certainly need to
change from the status quo to reflect changes in the size of, and relationships between, each of the actors, but the
existence of transparency, rule of law, free markets and open commercial competition, highlighted previously, is
fundamental.
While the achievement of such a trans-Pacific regime does not depend solely, or even principally, on the United States, it
does require that the U.S. adjust its approach toward both Asia and the Americas.
The U.S. must begin with an integrated Trans-Pacific strategy that seeks synergies between its activities in, and the
dynamics of, both regions. The U.S. must clearly articulate the values it represents, and the benefits of its approach for
the economic development, political sovereignty, human dignity, and quality of life of those on both sides of the Pacific.
While it communicates that story, it should admit mistakes where appropriate, and modify its approach based on local
conditions, empirical successes, and its own shortcomings.
The U.S. Trans-Pacific strategy must, of necessity, utilize a whole-of government approach, focused on strengthening
institutions in both the Americas and Asia, as well as fortifying transparent, egalitarian, and democratic governance

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frameworks in both the formal and informal spheres, for managing the issues of trade, investment, finance, migration,
knowledge flows, and environment that arise from the growing commercial and informational ties between the regions.
As part of the emerging trans-Pacific framework, the United States should advocate more strongly for the opening of
APEC to new members, particularly those from Latin America. Several states from the region, including Colombia and
Costa Rica, have long lobbied to join, yet have been precluded from doing so by the moratorium that the organization
has imposed on accepting new members since 1997. Yet the United States should also insist that its support is
conditional on the commitment of new members to free trade, transparent institutions, democracy, and the rule of law.
Supporting the incorporation of new members into APEC in this fashion would strengthen the organization as a vehicle
for promoting a trans-Pacific regime in which all states had an equal opportunity to prosper, while also allow the United
States to help its Latin American neighbors build constructive, market-oriented relationships across the Pacific including,
but not biased toward, the PRC.
Beyond APEC, the United States should also prioritize the successful completion and entry into force of the Trans-Pacific
partnership. As a necessary condition, the Republican-controlled U.S. Congress should allow the advance of free trade
and rule of law to prevail over its aversion to the current Democratic administration, granting it fast track trade
promotion authority, under which the Congress could not add amendments to the final accord, but only decide whether to
accept or reject it through a single yes-no vote.[24] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%
20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftn24]

With or without the TPP, the U.S. should also work to strengthen bilateral trans-Pacific bonds between Asian and Latin
American states sharing U.S. values regarding democracy, rule of law and free markets. U.S. institutions could, for
example, work with the Japanese, Korean, and Indian governments to facilitate their investment in similarly-oriented
Latin American and Caribbean states such as Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, and Trinidad and Tobago, on the
condition that the Asian companies interested in such investments also demonstrated a good track record of
transparency and adherence to international laws and norms on issues such as bribery, environmental compliance, and
good corporate citizenship.
The United States can also strengthen such trans-Pacific ties among nations that share its values at the sub-national
level. The U.S. can, for example, leverage its good reputation in University-level education by expanding programs to
study in the U.S. for students from both Latin America and Asia. Such an initiative should include not only technical
subjects, but also business and area studies programs to help prepare Latin American and Caribbean students to do
business in, and engage with, Asia, and to help students from Asia learn about, and prepare to do business in Latin
America and the Caribbean.
The approach should not be to keep China out, of the region, nor to preserve the current institutional rules or balance of
power, but to integrate the P.R.C. and other actors into an institutional framework that all can live with.
As it builds such ties at all levels, the United States should also look for opportunities to work with the PRC and the
Chinese people where the interests of the two countries coincide, and where the benefits of collaboration outweigh the
costs. Candidate areas include the maintenance of transparent, healthy trans-Pacific financial systems and capital
markets, achieving greater efficiencies in international transportation systems and customs clearances processes,
strengthening standards for trade accounting and investment protection, and combating trans-Pacific money laundering
and organized crime.
Even as the United States facilitates stronger ties between states sharing its values across the Pacific, it must also
strengthen its own bilateral relationships with the countries on each side. With respect to Latin America, the U.S. can do
more to give preferential access to its markets for Latin American producers, as well as using tax breaks and other
incentives to induce U.S. based corporations to invest more in the region. A more generous U.S. immigration policy,
normalization of the status of those immigrants legally in the U.S., and work to bring down transaction fees for
remittances from the U.S. to Latin America would similarlygo far to build goodwill toward the U.S. Reforming U.S. drug
and gun control policies, like its Cuba policy, would also do much to remove such distracting issues from the table,

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enabling the country to focus its resources more fully on the strategically critical question of the regime that prevails in
the Pacific.
Finally, in both Asia and the Western Hemisphere, the U.S. must do a far better job with strategic communications, in
selling the value of free markets, democratic governance, and the rule of law as the approach best suited to leverage
expanding trans-Pacific interactions to bring sustainable development for all parties, as well as follow-through, to
ensure that the nations of the world reap and perceive the benefits from pursuing the free market and transparent, rule of
law policies, and democratic institutions that the U.S. promotes in its public diplomacy.
At the end of the Cold War, many Latin American and Caribbean states adopted neoliberal economic policies advocated
by the U.S., yet as it celebrated its ideological triumph and the end of history, the U.S. arguably did not fully appreciate
its vested interests in ensuring that those policies also succeeded. The U.S. failure to invest adequate time and
resources to ensure that the Washington Consensus produced development across all parts of the societies that adopted
them, with lessened inequality, corruption and abuses, gave rise to the grievances which populist politicians such as
Hugo Chavez would later exploit to capture and consolidate power.
If the failure of the U.S., at the end of the Cold War, to invest in the success of the nations adopting its model contributed
to the rise of populism and the ultimate marginalization of the U.S. position in the Americas, the costs of inattention to the
definition of the regime that prevails across the Pacific in the 21st Century, are far higher. It includes facing a powerful,
nuclear-armed China in a world in which the U.S. no longer possesses the combination of international good-will, military
dominance, and institutional leverage that it enjoys today, and in which returns to capital no longer flows principally to
companies based in democratically-oriented Western governments, and in which the dollar is no longer the principal
international reserve currency to sustain Washingtons fiscal policies. While some in Latin America, as well as in Asia,
might welcome such a possibility, it is ultimately a world in which none will be secure in their prosperity, national
sovereignty, or individual liberty. For those on both sides of the Pacific who share a commitment to such values, the
stakes are too high not to get it right. [https://www.blogger.com/null]

[https://www.linkedin.com/pub/robert-evan-ellis/75/79/19a]

[1] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref1] Prashanth Parameswaran, TPP as Important as Another Aircraft Carrier: US
Defense Secretary, The Diplomat, April 8, 2015, http://thediplomat.com/2015/04/tpp-as-important-as-another-aircraftcarrier-us-defense-secretary/.
[2] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref2] See, for example, Richard Weitz, Pivot Out, Rebalance In, The Diplomat, May
3, 2012, http://thediplomat.com/2012/05/pivot-out-rebalance-in/ [http://thediplomat.com/2012/05/pivot-out-rebalance-in/] .

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[3] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref3] Beyond the $35 billion fund announced in Fortaleza, China has publicly
announced that it anticipates investing $250 billion in the region in the next decade.
[4] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref4] For a more detailed discussion, see R. Evan Ellis, Latin America's Foreign
Policy as the Region Engages in China. Security and Defense Studies Review. Center for Hemispheric Defense
Studies. Winter 2014.
[5] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref5] The Presidents of the Pacific Alliance in New York City, Official Website of the

Pacific Alliance, September 23, 2014, http://alianzapacifico.net/en/the-presidents-of-the-pacific-alliance-in-new-york-city/


[http://alianzapacifico.net/en/the-presidents-of-the-pacific-alliance-in-new-york-city/] .
[6] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref6] Gremios, en alerta por fallo que tumb ley de Alianza del Pacfico, El Tiempo,
April 25, 2014, http://www.eltiempo.com/archivo/documento/CMS-13882095.
[7] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref7] Jan Martnez Ahrens, La Alianza del Pacfico inicia su expansin hacia los
pases asiticos, El Pais, June 20, 2014,
http://internacional.elpais.com/internacional/2014/06/20/actualidad/1403299453_596128.html.
[8] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref8] Nor, curiously, has the Alliance published any new official communiques on its
website since September 2014. Pacific Alliance. Official Website. http://alianzapacifico.net/en/2014/09/
[http://alianzapacifico.net/en/2014/09/] . Accessed April 9, 2015.
[9] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref9] Bachelet denies any idea of stepping down, because of her family's corruption
scandal, Mercopress, April 8, 2015, http://en.mercopress.com/2015/04/08/bachelet-denies-any-idea-of-stepping-downbecause-of-her-family-s-corruption-scandal.
[10] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref10] On April 1, 2015, the Peruvian National Assembly voted to oust the Prime
Minister, Ana Jara, over the scandal.
[11] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref11] Kevin P. Gallagher and Margaret Myers, "China-Latin America Finance
Database," Inter-American Dialogue. Accessed April 10, 2014, http://thedialogue.org/map_list.
[12] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref12] See R. Evan Ellis, China on the Ground in Latin America: Challenges for the
Chinese and Impacts on the Region. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2014, pp. 29-30.
[13] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref13] Programa Mi Casa Bien Equipada ofrece 14 mil equipos en Los Prceres, El
Universal, August 29, 2012, http://www.eluniversal.com.
[14] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref14] Will Connors and Luciana Magalhaes, Brazils Petrobras Obtains $3.5 Billion
in Financing From China Development Bank, The Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2015, http://www.wsj.com/articles/brazilspetrobras-obtains-3-5-billion-financing-from-china-development-bank-1427892756.
[15] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref15] Cules son los puntos centrales del proyecto de reestatizacin del servicio

ferroviario, La Nacion, April 9, 2015, http://www.lanacion.com.ar/1782983-cuales-son-los-puntos-centrales-del-proyectode-reestatizacion-del-servicio-ferroviario.

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[16] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref16] See, for example, Fernando Villavicencio, Ecuador Made in China, Quito,
Ecuador: Artes Graficas Silva, 2013.
[17] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref17] Bolivia negocia construccin de hidroelctrica de 1.300 millones de dlares,
La Razn, July 11, 2013, http://www.la-razon.com.
[18] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref18] Yet China-funded projects in Ecuador have been mired in problems as well,
with delays in projects such as the Coca-Coda Sinclair hydroelectric facility and the Refinery of the Pacific.
[19] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref19] Ronald McLean Abaroa Fuera de HKND Group, La Prensa, March 17, 2015,

http://www.laprensa.com.ni/2015/03/17/nacionales/1800380-ronald-maclean-abaroa-fuera-de-hknd-group.
[20] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref20] Nicaragua Canal Project Description, HKND Group Official Website, January
5, 2015, http://hknd-group.com/upload/pdf/20150105/Nicaragua_Canal_Project_Description_EN.pdf.
[21] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref21] 'Mercosur does not exist': Uruguay should try a one to one deal with the
Europe, MercoPress, February 1, 2015, http://en.mercopress.com/2015/02/01/Mercosur-does-not-exist-uruguay-shouldtry-a-one-to-one-deal-with-the-europe.
[22] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref22] The expression is taken from the 2008 book of the same title by Kevin
Gallagher and Roberto Porzecanski (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press).
[23] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref23] For the most prominent exposition of the political collapse portion of this
scenario, see David Shambaugh, The Coming Chinese Crackup, The Wall Street Journal, March 6, 2015,
http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-coming-chinese-crack-up-1425659198.
[24] [file:///C:/Users/Rahul/Downloads/The%20New%20Strategic%20Environment%20of%20the%20Trans-Pacific%20-%20Evan%
20Ellis%20-%20FINAL%20(1).docx#_ftnref24] U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter recognized the critical strategic
importance of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, characterizing it as important to the rebalance to the Pacific as having
another aircraft carrier. See Prashanth Parameswaran, TPP as Important as Another Aircraft Carrier: US Defense
Secretary, The Diplomat, April 8, 2015, http://thediplomat.com/2015/04/tpp-as-important-as-another-aircraft-carrier-usdefense-secretary/.

Posted 16 hours ago by IndraStra Global


Labels: Asia Pacific, Brazil, China, Pacific, South America, TPP, Transpacific, USA
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FEATURED | The New Strategic Environment of the Trans-Pacific : A U.S. Perspective by Dr. R. Evan Ellis
This article was first published at Poltica Externa , a leading Brazilian Foreign Policy Journal By Dr. R. Evan
Ellis Introduction In an April 2015 speech, U.S. Secretary
of Defense Ashton Carter affirmed the significance of the trade regime that
prevails...
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