13.12.2021
The U.S.-China Technological War
No. 4 2021 October/December
DOI: 10.31278/1810-6374-2021-19-4-78-96
Ivan V. Danilin

The Primakov Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO),
Moscow, Russia
Head of Science and Innovation Department

AUTHOR IDs

ORCID: 0000-0002-4251-1998,
ResearcherID: L-4388-2017
SPIN: 1155-9148

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E-mail: [email protected]
Tel.: +7 499 128 8796
Address: 23 Profsoyuznaya Str., Moscow 117997, Russia

Abstract
The technological war, or Tech War, as part of the geopolitical conflict between the United States and China raises a range of questions for researchers, the most important one being the role of digital technologies and markets in international relations and world politics. The article studies the motives and objectives of the Tech War and its long-term effects using available academic literature on sanctions and research data on the digital economy and high-tech markets, including the political aspects of the U.S.-China rivalry. Analogues from the Cold War and other conflicts suggest that the economic purpose of the Tech War is to limit China’s capacity in the long term. However, the new realities transform both the instruments and goals of the traditional superpowers’ economic withstanding. The importance of information and communication technologies (ICT) and the rise of the digital economy have made traditional geopolitical and market (commercial) dimensions of the conflict intertwined with high technology seen as a strategic resource and a separate area of conflict. As for the role of digital technology in world politics, a reverse process is observed: its importance is growing due to the traditional (geo)political factors, including securitization of the digital sphere, enhanced by the narratives of new technological revolutions. These factors increase the intensity of the Tech War since competition in high-tech markets is perceived as a zero-sum game. However, in the long term, the globalized, highly internationalized nature of digital markets and technologies may lead to the normalization of global processes and world politics.
Keywords
U.S., China, technological war, digital technologies, global high-tech competition, geopolitics
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For citation, please use:
Danilin, I.V., 2021. The U.S.-China Technological War. Russia in Global Affairs, 19(4), pp. 78-96. DOI: 10.31278/1810-6374-2021-19-4-78-96

 

Starting from 2018-2019, the United States has been pushing ahead with technological sanctions against leading Chinese companies and China itself, restricting bilateral scientific and technological relations. Such measures apply to the import of Chinese products, venture capital investment, access of Chinese companies to U.S. stock markets, and interaction between research centers (Mascitelli and Chung, 2019; Sun, 2019; Leksyutina, 2020; Danilin, 2020; Wu, 2020). The focus is on information and communication—digital—technologies as the most significant factor of modern development. Moreover, due to the extraterritorial nature of U.S. sanctions and dialogue with allies, many restrictions are turning global (specifically those on 5G, microelectronics, etc.). These processes, initiated following the start of the trade war (Steinbock, 2018; Salitsky and Semenova, 2019; Sun, 2019; Leksyutina, 2020; Afontsev, 2020) and by analogy with it, have been called ‘technological war,’ or ‘Tech War.’

This special battlefield between the two superpowers needs to be studied most seriously. On the one hand, just like the trade war (Afontsev, 2020, p. 193-194), the technological conflict largely came as a surprise, heralding a departure from the previous logic of building open high-tech markets and global value chains. It is important to note that the scale and depth of the conflict clearly go beyond the “usual” technological bounds of the post-bipolar period (Kaempfer and Lowenberg, 2007; Hufbauer et al., 2009; Smeets, 2018; Hufbauer and Jung, 2020) and look very much like another Cold War.

On the other hand, the Tech War between the United States and China raises a much more important question about the role of digital technologies in modern world politics and international relations. The discussion on how ICT significantly change the parameters of a state’s might and power, as well as the aggregate capacity of states has been going on for quite a while, just like the debate on a greater role of the civilian technological sector in international relations and foreign policy (Simon, 1996; Ross, 2011; Kissinger, 2014; Cartwright, 2020; Wu, 2020; Raska, 2021). But can we say that modern digital solutions and, especially, such technologies as 5G, artificial intelligence or quantum systems form some new dimension of international political and geopolitical processes? Many authors point to a new level of challenges and threats, and some even claim that due to the information manipulations and other capabilities digital corporations are transformed into new instruments of power projection, while commercial digital technologies appear to be more and more weaponized (Dorfman, 2020; Cartwright, 2020; Oates, 2020).

An analysis of the Tech War could help us understand whether we are really witnessing a transformation of ICT’s role in global politics, or we are dealing with some traditional phenomena reengineered for the new realities.

To answer this question, it seems appropriate to address the theories of economic sanctions and, more broadly, of economic confrontations between superpowers, with special attention paid to the research on securitization and political aspects of high-tech competition (including the ideas of neo-techno nationalism). Since the initiator and the impelling force of the Tech War is the United States (China painstakingly depoliticizes its international technological relations), this paper focuses primarily on U.S. policies and strategies.

 

Technological War as Part of the Great-Power conflict

 

Presumably, the first step towards understanding the essence of the technological war and the role of digital technologies in contemporary international relations is to analyze the causes and objectives of the U.S.-China confrontation in the ICT area.

The rationale for the Tech War has been formalized in U.S. official documents (see, for example, U.S. Department of Defense, 2020; U.S. Department of State, 2020, pp. 4-19, 24-26). Apart from the prevention of risks to global democracy and sanctions for the alleged suppression of ethnic minorities (which rather reinforce the focal points of U.S. policies), three key groups of causes and objectives can be distinguished.

Firstly, there are quite traditional measures (Mastanduno, 1985; Huffbauer et al., 2009) aimed at containing the rival power by preventing the export and other types of critical defense and dual technology transfer from the United States and its allied and partner nations. Incidentally, this approach has been invariably present in U.S. policies towards China. Here the focus is on the Chinese commercial ICT sector, which since 2018 is also reinforced by China’s civil-military fusion strategy. The latter implies tighter interaction between Chinese defense-related organizations and private high-tech companies as sources of cutting-edge technologies (Manuel and Hicks, 2020; U.S. Department of Defense, 2020, pp. 16-22, 142).

This rationale corresponds with the second goal—reducing vulnerability of the United States, its allies and partners to next-generation cyber threats that are attributed to Chinese digital technologies (Leksyutina, 2020; U.S. Department of State, 2020, pp. 11-13, 23-24; Dorfman, 2020; Smith and Brown, 2021).

Finally, a separate goal of the Tech War is limiting China’s “unfair” trade and economic practices (Atkinson and Ezell, 2012; Nakayama 2012; Shim and Shin 2016; Gewirtz, 2019; Manning, 2019; Gewirtz, 2019; Qin, 2019; Kim et al. 2020; Capri, 2020; U.S. Department of State, 2020). Washington accuses Beijing of forcing Western companies to transfer technologies, stealing intellectual property, providing exclusive support for “national champion” companies, and using other non-market measures to boost economic development. These accusations are not new and have already caused controversies in the past (Johnson-Freese and Erickson, 2006; Atkinson and Ezell, 2012; Shim and Shin, 2016), but since the mid-2010s, amid the boom of the Chinese high-tech sector, they have become critical. China’s new innovative potential and supportive policies not only threaten U.S. economic competitiveness, but also pose risks to American leadership and technological sovereignty.

However, for all the importance of these motives and goals and the general context of the U.S.-China conflict, the available literature on sanctions clearly indicates that we are witnessing a much more important phenomenon. Using the classification of sanctions proposed by M. Mastandano with regard to the Cold War, we can define this phenomenon as ‘economic war’ (Mastanduno, 1985, pp. 506-514). Its aim is to limit the aggregate capacity of the rival power and its growth in the long term (Mastanduno, 1985; Kaempfer and Lowenberg, 2007; Hufbauer, et al., 2009; Smeets, 2018). In the case of the Tech War, sanctions and other measures are expected to increase the costs of China’s innovative development. This, in turn, is considered a critical solution to eliminate the risk of China’s emerging as the United States’ opponent with comparable or equal economic and military potential. It is important to note that many experts and the Chinese elites themselves interpret the Tech War precisely this way (Segal, 2019; Gewirtz, 2019; Leksyutina, 2020; Wu, 2020; Riecke, 2020).

This strategy is closely linked to the specifics of both the Chinese and global economy, and current technological trends. In particular, the emphasis on ICT is logical, considering the enormous importance of digital technologies for the growth of China’s GDP (including export revenues and economic effects of digitalization on its basic industries) as well as for the development of its National Innovation System (UNCTAD, 2019; OECD, 2020). So is the focus on high-tech digital corporations and startups as the key actors in China’s digitalization and innovative transformation (Steinbock, 2018; Sun, 2019).

These and other factors support the idea of the growing importance of digital technologies and, more broadly, of high-tech markets in international relations (Cafruny, 2019; Wu, 2020). However, the question arises: To what extent are ICT changing global politics?

What we see in the Tech War can partly be explained by some very traditional theoretical considerations. Firstly, this relates to the vision of commercial digital technologies as a new strategic resource in the race of superpowers, and secondly, as an important factor of their aggregate capacity growth (Ding and Defoe, 2021). These phenomena and interpretations are not new and have many historical parallels, from space technologies (in the U.S.-USSR “race” and even in the U.S.-EU and U.S.-China relations) to U.S.-Japan competition in the 1980s and 1990s in the electronics markets (Simon, 1996; Johnson-Freese and Erickson, 2006; European Union, 2019; Miller, 2019; Hobbs, 2020). However, it seems that the current conflict has affected the understanding of digital technologies as a new strategic resource and the attitude of elites towards the digital high-tech sector and markets.

 

Digital Technology as a New Factor Of International Relations

 

The most important change brought about by the Tech War relates to the evolution of the phenomenon of economic war.

Today the concept of ‘strategic resource’ is not only interpreted in a broader way, but also changes approaches towards how the technological dimension of economic war is implemented. This relates to the shift of emphasis from traditional restrictions on the transfer of critical or dual-use technologies to a broader policy focus, and to prevention of Chinese high-tech trade and investment expansion (as part of the so-called neo-techno nationalist policies (Nakayama 2012; Shim and Shin 2016; Manning, 2019; Gewirtz, 2019; Kim et al., 2020; Capri, 2020)). Also, leadership in the global commercial high-tech markets is now perceived as an important factor in building a state’s aggregate capacity, while market competition is obviously seen as a new space for geopolitical contentions and a factor of structural power.

The nature of these changes is well explained by the latest economic developments.

In recent decades, the role of China and Chinese companies in the global ICT production and export has grown rapidly, reaching about 40% (in value-added terms) by the end of the 2010s (UNCTAD, 2019, pp. 51-58, 74-75; National Science Board, 2020, 41-44; The World Bank, 2021). Yet China remains highly dependent on the import of the most technologically advanced solutions—from electronic components and services for the manufacturing of high-performance chips to software (UNCTAD, 2019, 54; Lapedus, 2019; Grimes and Du, 2020; Congressional Research Service, 2020; Danilin, 2020). U.S. companies remain the key actors or ultimate technology and IP holders in these segments. For example, the U.S. still accounts for 47% of the semiconductor market (China only 6%), including over 61% of logic chip production (China 9%); 63% of the analog semiconductor systems market (China’s share is less than 5%); and 40% of the equipment for semiconductor production (China is under 10%) (Semiconductor Industry Association, 2020; Congressional Research Service, 2020). Also, U.S. intellectual property is present in all key industry solutions, which determines the effectiveness of U.S. extraterritorial sanctions that blocked the interaction of Chinese corporations with the leading providers of manufacturing systems in the field of microelectronics (ASML), chips and services for their contract manufacturing (TSMC, Samsung, Flex, etc.), and with other technological companies.

However, in the 2010s the rapid growth of Chinese companies and state support for the emerging digital technologies changed the situation. Competitive pressure on U.S. corporations increased so that the revision of the global value chains architecture in the electronics sector began to look a realistic possibility. In addition, the rise of the Chinese Internet sector as a new high-tech actor made the economic challenge even more viable. Importantly, this process took place during a new wave of digitalization expected to form new giant markets and produce significant effects on the global economy (UNCTAD, 2019; National Science Board, 2020, 41-44; OECD, 2020). Amid accusations against China of “unfair trade practices” this caused rising concern in the United States, which is well illustrated by the debate over the “Made in China 2025” program (Laskai, 2018; U.S. Congress, 2019; Cafruny, 2019, pp. 118-119; Wey, 2019; Davis and Wei, 2019; Cory and Atkinson, 2020; Ding and Dafoe, 2021).

Economic (as well as defense) leadership was at stake. Since breakthrough digital technologies are currently developed primarily by private companies and globalization of their operations is an important factor of their success (incomes from trade, access to world talents, technological and production resources, etc.), geopolitical conflicts and trade wars begin to converge.

The interconnection between trade and geopolitics manifests itself even in international political initiatives.

Quite illustrative in this respect are the U.S. Clean [Telecommunications] Network Initiative, the U.S.-EU Trade and Technology Council, as well as other U.S. initiatives in the dialogue with Europe, India and other partners to limit the penetration of Chinese digital standards into “democratic countries” (U.S. Congress, 2019; Cafruny, 2019; Danilin, 2020; Fidler, 2020; Wu, 2020; Riecke, 2020; Triolo, 2020, pp. 13-14, 18-20; Smith and Brown, 2021, p. 254). Efforts to prevent cyber risks and reduce China’s economic influence are augmented by the struggle for control of standards as a factor of asymmetric trade advantages, as well as traditional protectionism. In turn, China’s Digital Silk Road initiative, which previously had a mostly economic and neo-techno nationalist dimension (Shen, 2018), in the new realm seems to demonstrate a more distinct international political edge.

Historically, the situation is quite specific, if not unprecedented. The Soviet Union explored the possibility of exporting consumer electronics (Morita, 2014, pp. 154-156). But Soviet foreign economic activity was radically different from China’s neo-techno nationalist policy and did not regard the export of civilian tech products as a major factor of development or as an instrument of achieving geopolitical goals (Khanin, 2008, pp. 235-242, 476-486). High-tech markets did not play any role in other systemic international conflicts involving the United States, including confrontation (until the end of the 1970s) with China, as well as with Iran, North Korea, and Russia in the post-bipolar period (Huffbauer et al., 2009; Rogov, 2016). On the contrary, trade and economic conflicts, including those in the high-tech field, were previously almost devoid of geopolitical motives. The ongoing U.S.-China technological war is often seen as an analogy of the struggle between the United States and Japan over the electronics markets in the 1970-1990s (Irwin, 1996; pp. 127-167; Cafruny, 2019; Miller, 2019; Ding and Dafoe, 2021; Afontsev, 2020, pp. 193-194). But the latter one was much smaller in scale. And what is more important, unlike modern China, Japan had no international ambitions that would run counter to the U.S. interests. The discussions about the emergence of Japan as an independent global center of power in the 1980s and the 1990s were hypothetical, if not speculative (Vogel, 1989; Ishihara, 1991).

However, as soon as we recognize the great importance of commercial ICT for the aggregate capacity of states and, consequently, the growing importance of global high-tech markets for world politics, a new question comes to the forefront: To what extent does the digital high-tech sector determine the specifics of technological war and other international and political processes in this area?

 

Securitization as a Driver of Geopolitical Transformation of Digital High Tech

 

Oddly enough, the digital Tech War is not the ideal solution to the challenge of U.S.-China technological competition.

In the short term, U.S. sanctions have a visible negative impact on individual companies such as Huawei. The general picture is more complicated. The growth of Chinese ICT exports has slowed down, but not dramatically (from 10.16% in 2017 to 5.78% in 2020). The same is true of the Chinese share in the U.S. ICT imports (down from 50% to 43%) (UNCTAD, 2021). However, China’s ICT production and trade still grows, and so does China’s share in global exports (from 42.06% to 43.37%). Moreover, China has initiated new vigorous R&D efforts, investments in startups and high-tech manufacturing. However costly this policy has turned out to be, it has clearly yielded certain positive results. Also, the U.S. pressure has not changed Beijing’s position on the most important international issues or on the expansion of 5G and other digital solutions, including those within the framework of the Digital Silk Road project.

Furthermore, even in the long term, when the main results of the Tech War are expected to manifest themselves, its effectiveness remains questionable. A full-scale technological blockade of China is impossible theoretically and practically (Mastanduno, 1985; Kaempfer and Lowenberg, 2007; Hufbauer et al., 2009, pp. 65-124, 158-160; Smeets, 2018, pp. 5-6; Danilin, 2020). Moreover, some compensatory strategies are possible, especially since changes in the aggregate capacity are marked by great inertia (Brooks and Wohlforth, 2016; Istomin, 2020). Nor should one ignore the enormous importance of non-technological factors such as the effectiveness of China’s research policies, import substitution, and institutional reform. In other words, sanctions and other restrictions may not necessarily upset the quality of China’s economic growth in the future.

Moreover, as American experts rightly point out, sanctions do not solve the United States’ main task, namely, they do not increase its potential in competition with China (Gewirtz, 2019; Manuel and Hicks, 2020). Instead, they pose real risks to the normal development of the digital sector and ICT markets, which have historically kept the focus on global trade, open innovation, and the growth of international specialization and cooperation. This, in turn, may entail adverse effects on the U.S. economy itself.

The most adequate explanation for all these considerations is that the driving force behind the “war” is not so much the special features of digital high tech, as very traditional securitization of emerging digital technologies and global digital competition.

The specific nature of digital technology provides the widest opportunities for its securitization (Hansen and Nissenbaum, 2009; Lacy, 2018). This effect is enforced by two important features of the U.S.-China conflict. Firstly, it is the abovementioned vision of emerging digital technologies as a strategic resource. Secondly, one should take into account the narratives of technological revolutions, for example, the concepts of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, global changes under the influence of artificial intelligence, etc. (Brynjolfsson and McAfee, 2016; Rifkin, 2014; Schwab, 2017). The popularity of these ideas should be attributed to a variety of factors, including specific domestic social and economic agendas of the United States and China. In the United States, for example, the fear of de-industrialization, unemployment, and loss of economic and innovation leadership steers interest to the emerging “revolutionary” technologies. In China, it is the ideology of “catching up with and overtaking” the West (ganchao), as well as the need to ensure sustainable economic growth as a factor of social and political stability (Atkinson and Ezell, 2012; Gewirtz, 2019). The problem with the concepts of “revolutions” is that when they are actualized in the geopolitical discussion, the elites begin to view digital development as a non-cooperative game. Vladimir Putin expressed this perception of the elites very accurately in his speech on artificial intelligence. He said that the leader in the AI race would become the “master of the world” (TASS, 2017).

In addition, the very logic of technological war reinforces the trend towards securitization of both digital technologies and ICT markets. At the level of narratives, dominant telecommunication standards, emerging technologies, and other components of high-tech confrontation are already described by the expert community and the elites in terms that are quite close to the categories of institutional and structural power (Barnett and Duvall, 2005; Gwynn 2019). However specific, similar considerations are clearly present in China, which, along with protectionism, has determined its efforts to prevent the penetration of U.S. Internet corporations into the Chinese market.

In other words, technological war is not an inevitable consequence of the impact of digital high tech on international relations. There is an overassessment of the challenges and opportunities associated with emerging technologies—in full accordance with the defense and political processes described by the concept of strategic uncertainty (Istomin, 2020). We can even say that ideas of new “revolutions” in the realm of global competition and the rise of new centers of power (including high-tech ones) bring American and other global elites into the digital “Thucydides trap.”

This, of course, does not contradict the growing importance of the digital factor in international relations. However, it implies that this process is of a reciprocal nature, or that the technological factor is still largely actualized by traditional (geo)political processes.

 

*  *  *

 

Technological war, which initially seemed to be a deviation, has become a new normal in the world’s politics and economy.

The new digital revolution and rising competition for global high-tech markets have increased their importance in the geopolitical conflict between the United States and China and, more broadly, in international relations. As a result, leadership is increasingly associated with the global redistribution of the “technological rent” and control of the digital markets as factors of [technological] sovereignty and structural power.

The origins of this process are rather subjective, but it will entail serious consequences for the world economy and politics. Elites and some experts see ICT through the lens of international risks and threats, sometimes even regarding digital services and corporations as weapons. As a consequence, digital development is perceived as a non-cooperative game, which explains many baffling aspects of the current U.S.-China digital conflict. In turn, attempts to apply traditional geopolitical instruments to high-tech markets lead to serious distortions in the normal mechanisms of their operation and, in the future, may even reduce the digital transformation potential. At the same time, technological conflicts aggravate the already severe international contradictions.

However, this process may not necessarily lead to Hobbesian technology wars of all against all, balkanization of markets, or a digital Cold War. Geopolitics of high tech will have to take into account the specifics of digital technologies and markets. In particular, the global nature of the ICT industry and the ongoing internationalization of Internet markets can become a natural obstacle to the emergence of blocs and to the sovereignization of the digital sphere. In other words, despite the seemingly complete picture of the Tech War with its quasi-bipolarity, this is merely an intermediate step towards a future state of both international relations and high-tech markets, with digital technologies possibly playing a new, more constructive role in global politics.

This article is part of the project “Post-Crisis World Order: Challenges and Technologies, Competition and Cooperation” carried out with support from the RF Ministry of Science and Higher Education (Agreement # 075-15-2020-783).
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