Ganging up on Trump? Sino-German Relations and the Problem with Soft Balancing against the USA

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Ganging up on Trump? Sino-German Relations and the Problem with Soft Balancing against the USA Sebastian Biba 1 # Journal of Chinese Political Science/Association of Chinese Political Studies 2020

Abstract Soft balancing has recently been framed as a general foreign policy strategy that is basically open to any state. However, what coalitions can actually engage in joint softbalancing behavior? To date, the literature has focused on more traditional foe-foe constellations and less traditional friend-friend constellations. In the former, all the softbalancing partners are foes of the opponent; in the latter, all the soft-balancing partners are friends/allies of the opponent. But what about mixed soft-balancing coalitions in which one partner is a foe of the opponent whereas another partner is an ally/friend of the opponent? This article sets out to argue that such mixed soft-balancing coalitions are not possible. It moreover contends that the reason for this is the fact that the execution of soft-balancing behavior is more demanding and more consequential than one might think upon hearing the term “soft.” The hurdles for the ally/friend of the opponent in such a (theoretical) mixed soft-balancing coalition are therefore too high to actually follow through with such a strategy. To support its arguments, the article analyzes a crucial case study based on a most-likely-case design. More precisely, it looks into Sino-German reactions to US president Donald Trump’s “America First” approach. The article indeed finds that while both China and Germany have lamented Trump’s “America First” approach, the leap for Germany as a US ally and friend to translating the complaints about Trump into tangible soft-balancing activities together with China has simply been too big. Even though Germany and China are themselves close partners, Germany ultimately remains too close to the USA, and US positions on China, for Sino-German soft balancing against the USA to be a workable option. Keywords Soft balancing . Mixed coalitions . Sino-German relations . Trump’s “America

first” approach . US-German relations

* Sebastian Biba [email protected]–frankfurt.de

1

Institute for Political Science, Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 6, 60629 Frankfurt am Main, Germany

S. Biba

Introduction When Robert Pape introduced the concept of soft balancing to the International Relations literature in 2005 as an approach that “is replacing traditional hard balancing as the principal reaction of major powers to the Bush administration’s preventive war doctrine” [45:38] and T.V. Paul seconded that soft balancing was an “attractive strategy through which second-tier major powers are able to challenge the legitimacy of the interventionist policies of the United States” [46:59], their reasoning was criticized immediately and quite heavily. Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth, for example, maintained that “the soft-balancing argument has no traction. The only reason some analysts have concluded otherwise is because they have failed to consider