[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 85 (Wednesday, May 18, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2567-S2569]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Indo-Pacific Region
Mr. HAGERTY. Mr. President, with the President of the United States
soon to be departing on his first Asia trip, I rise to speak today
about U.S. policy in the Indo-Pacific, an area of the world that I know
very well, having served as U.S. Ambassador to Japan prior to joining
the U.S. Senate.
While U.S. foreign policy in recent months has focused largely on
Eastern Europe, we cannot take our attention away from our Nation's
greatest strategic adversary, namely, the Chinese Communist Party.
Confronting communist China is the essential responsibility of our
time, as the China challenge--and how the United States and
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our allies respond to it--will determine whether freedom or autocracy
defines the 21st century. That is why I am pleased to see President Joe
Biden investing the time and energy to travel to South Korea and to
Japan this weekend.
I can tell you just how critical I believe this trip is because I
made a trip similar to this just last month. In April, I led the first
congressional delegation to visit Japan since the pandemic began. I was
joined by my colleagues Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland and Senator John
Cornyn of Texas.
During our 6 days in Japan, our bipartisan delegation met with the
country's top leaders, including the Prime Minister, his Cabinet
members, Parliamentarians, and top leaders from Japanese industry. I
think it is fair to say that our delegation returned with a great sense
of optimism--optimism about the opportunities that lie before our two
nations to increase our cooperation diplomatically, militarily,
economically, and technologically and, by so doing, strengthening our
alliance.
While I certainly have policy disagreements with the current
administration, I am hopeful that this is one area in which we can find
common ground. The fates of our Nation and the world depend on it. This
challenge, quite frankly, is just far too important to get wrong. So I
am hopeful that President Biden will seize upon the opportunities
presented to him in the Indo-Pacific region to confront the China
challenge head-on and that this trip will provide him with a greater
perspective to do so.
I am pleased to see this administration maintain a focus on the Indo-
Pacific region, a focus that President Trump began and that I
personally was proud to help lead from my diplomatic post in Tokyo. I
also applaud President Biden for the actions that he has taken to
engage the Quad at the leader level. Much more can be done.
In terms of strengthening our diplomatic cooperation, the United
States should warmly welcome Japan's proactive leadership in response
to recent international crises. Japan is the world's third largest
economy and a major financial player on the world stage. Japan is a
member of the G7.
In the days after Russia's unprovoked and unjustified invasion of
Ukraine, the Government of Japan joined by imposing strong,
multilateral sanctions against Vladimir Putin's war machine.
Japan's support on sanctions is as important as it is necessary. I
saw this firsthand when, as U.S. Ambassador to Japan, I worked with
then-Prime Minister Abe and his administration in complying fully with
U.S. secondary sanctions to end Japan's purchases of Iranian oil in
2018. With Japan's help, we dramatically reduced Iran's revenue stream
and its ability to fund terror at that time. We see Japan's importance
today with regard to multilateral sanctions against Russia.
Going forward, the United States must do its utmost to ensure that
Japan always has a seat at the table on major international issues.
Indeed, I was very pleased to see Foreign Minister Hayashi become the
first Japanese Cabinet member to attend a NATO ministerial when he
traveled to Brussels last April. And I am even more pleased to learn
that Prime Minister Kishida is considering attending the NATO Summit in
Spain next month.
Here, I see an opportunity for the United States to engage further
with Japan and NATO by exploring new ways to expand high-level
diplomatic interactions and information sharing.
When I made the suggestion to Secretary of State Antony Blinken
during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing in early May, I was
glad to see that my suggestion was well received.
The second opportunity that I see is in the area of improving defense
and deterrence in the Indo-Pacific. The United States and Japan must
further increase coordination on defense planning and procurement as
Japan looks to significantly boost its spending on defense.
Japan has already begun the process of rewriting its national
security strategy and its related national defense strategy. At the
same time, leaders in Tokyo see growing support from the Japanese
people to roughly double Japan's defense spending to 2 percent of GDP.
These developments come at a critical moment. Xi Jinping and the
Chinese Communist Party have their eyes set on Taiwan, and they are
surely learning lessons from Russia's invasion of Ukraine. At the same
time, North Korean Dictator Kim Jong Un continues to develop nuclear
weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles as he poses grave and
gathering threats to the United States and to our allies in the region.
Our nations, therefore, must act with great urgency to strengthen
defense and deterrence in the Indo-Pacific. In particular, the United
States must encourage Japan to use their increased spending to field as
rapidly as possible new defense capabilities that are mobile, lethal,
and interoperable.
Japan must also significantly improve its cyber security capabilities
and its ability to share intelligence and information with its allies.
And it is critical that the American and Japanese militaries expand
joint training exercises with one another.
I have had the honor of witnessing firsthand the success of our joint
training exercises, and I encourage our nations to expand this
invaluable training.
The third area where I see an opportunity is on energy security, an
area in which we should be working together. This was the message that
I heard last month in Japan as leaders expressed concerns with
America's current energy policies.
Several years ago, I worked hard to encourage Japan to make
significant investments in LNG infrastructure to allow greater LNG
imports from the United States in order to strengthen our two nations'
energy security and our national security.
I hope President Biden's visit will underscore the significance of
American strength as an energy exporter to enhance the security of our
allies. But all members of the Quad must engage in the critical topic
of energy security.
India is the world's biggest democracy and now has an opportunity to
decrease its energy and military reliance on Russia, and Australia is a
significant energy exporter.
When Secretary Blinken recently testified before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, I pointed out to him that the Quad already has
high-level working groups working on COVID-19 vaccines, infrastructure,
critical and emerging technologies, space, cyber security, and
environmental matters. But my argument to him was that adding a new
working group in the Quad--one focused specifically on energy
security--makes strong strategic sense, as energy security is
inextricably linked to economic security and to our national security.
Frankly, it is surprising to me that the Quad hasn't already made this
issue a primary focus.
Secretary Blinken appeared to appreciate the suggestion, and I
emphatically urge the administration to take this idea to heart and
dedicate time and energy to discussing energy security in our Quad
strategic grouping.
The fourth area of opportunity that I see is in technology. The
United States and Japan already cooperate closely in this space. That
was a point that I sought to underscore in many of our meetings with
Japan's private sector leaders.
I see growing opportunities for our Quad partners to ensure our
respective technology sectors continue to work together and to generate
trusted alternatives in 5G, artificial intelligence, quantum computing,
and in other strategic technologies.
When I served as U.S. Ambassador to Japan, I helped the United States
and Japanese Governments coordinate closely to counter Huawei and
China's other heavily subsidized companies and to clear them from the
5G markets of our representative economies. This was important
because Chinese companies like Huawei pose grave and growing national
security and espionage risks.
Our U.S.-Japan strategy prevented Huawei and other Chinese Communist
Party-directed technology firms from obtaining the global scale that
they sought in their effort to dominate international markets.
It also created openings for firms in the United States, Japan, and
partner countries to pursue trusted 5G alternatives in supply chains,
including software-defined networks and ORAN technologies.
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With each passing year, the technology competition with China is only
intensifying. It is, therefore, imperative that the U.S.-Japan alliance
and the Quad increase coordination and innovation in response to
technological competition.
The fifth opportunity is in economic leadership in the Indo-Pacific.
When President Biden visits the region, I expect him to speak more
about the Indo-Pacific economic framework. It is clear that many of our
allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific are eager to see more U.S.
economic leadership.
As a next step, the United States should take the Indo-Pacific
Economic Framework's data provisions and turn them into a stand-alone,
sector-specific free-trade agreement.
The executive branch should look closely at the U.S.-Japan Digital
Trade Agreement of 2019 as a good starting point. This is the most
comprehensive and high-standards agreement addressing digital trade
barriers.
I was proud to help then-U.S. Trade Representative Bob Lighthizer
negotiate this and other bilateral agreements with Japan. Our efforts
brought about a more fair and reciprocal trading relationship between
our two nations, helping not only our economies but also our workers.
The Biden administration has rightly maintained the Trump
administration's tariffs on China as important leverage to uphold fair
and reciprocal trade. This is a critical tool in our arsenal, and I
hope the current administration continues to use it.
There certainly are other areas where the administration must hold
the line against China. The administration could do more to hold
communist China accountable for unleashing the COVID-19 pandemic upon
the world. It also needs to press Beijing to stop the deadly flow of
Chinese-origin fentanyl and fentanyl precursors from flowing across our
southern border and killing more than 100,000 Americans a year through
overdoses.
And we also know what is at stake when it comes to China's growing
military threats against Taiwan. The last administration set a high
standard on countering China, and I hope the current administration
builds on that success.
I believe there is strong bipartisan consensus in Congress when it
comes to the Indo-Pacific and when it comes to the rising opportunities
that we see before us to further strengthen the U.S.-Japan alliance and
the Quad. So I urge President Biden to seize these growing
opportunities that I have outlined when he travels to the Indo-Pacific.
As the only former American Ambassador serving in this body and as a
member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, I stand ready to work
with him as he does.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Smith). The Senator from Maryland.