09. Shah Muhammad-Tech-Asi-Pac-Oped thumbnail-Feb-2025-AP

The United States (US) has built an array of alliances under hub-and-spokes model to steer its realpolitik in the Asia-Pacific region. As the dominant hub, the US has orchestrated a zero-sum game through its network of spokes, particularly regional allies and partners. The high-tech factor has become a key element of power projection and military dominance in alliance politics. By leveraging advanced technologies such as AI, robotics and 5G, the US is mobilising regional allies to counterbalance the surging politico-military stature of China. It is being steered by the US’s Integrated Deterrence strategy in the Asia-Pacific that calls for a ‘seamless combination of capabilities.’

Quad is a prominent security bloc having the US as the hub and regional allies such as India, Japan, and Australia, as spokes. The joint communique of the Quad Leaders’ 2024 Summit  pledged expansion of partnerships in critical technologies such as AI, 5G and semiconductors. The inaugural funding of over USD 7.5 million was earmarked for joint research in AI, robotics and sensors. Since 2023, the members have committed undersea cable investments worth USD 140 million in the Asia-Pacific. This could be viewed as a rival strategy to undermine China’s undersea cable network under its Digital Silk Road initiative. The semiconductor competition is one of the key determinants of the Sino-US tech war. Hence, Quad is being leveraged to edge out China from semiconductor supply chains and maintain US preponderance over chips. In this regard, the bloc’s Semiconductor Supply Chain Initiative is a case in point.

AUKUS (Australia-UK-US) has emerged as another high-tech geopolitical arrangement that complements the goals of Quad in the Asia-Pacific. Firstly, it involves an underwater vehicle called Ghost Shark that the Australian Navy has acquired from the US company Anduril. It is a nuclear-powered, uncrewed and AI-enabled underwater vehicle having advanced ISR and strike capabilities. Its AI-powered features enable it to coordinate with other manned and unmanned platforms in real-time. Secondly, there are AI-enabled drones that facilitate battlefield coordination and seamless exchange of data between the AUKUS militaries. Thus, the AUKUS alliance is preparing for both land and maritime warfare in the advent of a full-fledged military confrontation against the common adversary.

On the contrary, China has restrained itself from adopting an overly geopolitical posture against these alliances, clinging to its geoeconomic approach that may offer geopolitical dividends in the long run. In 2024, the China-ASEAN joint communique called for greater cooperation in AI, 5G, cloud computing and digital government with the aim ‘to build a sustainable and inclusive digital ecosystem.’ Moreover, China has signed bilateral agreements under the Digital Silk Road with 40 countries, 24 of these being in the Asia-Pacific. Chinese companies like ZTE and Huawei are edging out Western companies by offering relatively affordable rates of 5G technology. Earlier, China exhibited a robotic dog mounted with rifles at Golden Dragon exercises in 2024 conducted jointly with regional countries Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand and Lao. It could be a response to the robotic dog exhibited by the US military in Project Convergence exercises conducted jointly with Quad and AUKUS countries.

Recent breakthroughs, like the DeepSeek-R1 AI model, not only challenge the US’s technological swagger but also undermine its geopolitical leverage, which has been crucial in strengthening alliances. In an anarchic system where technological competition operates as a zero-sum game, this shift translates into a relative gain for China, particularly in the Asia-Pacific. As China’s geoeconomic initiatives like the Digital Silk Road gain traction, regional dependence on Chinese technology and standards will likely deepen, amplifying Beijing’s ability to extract strategic concessions and reshape the balance of power.

The techno-politics underway may entail implications for regional as well as international peace and security. Asia-Pacific is the epicentre of global supply chains, characterised by the regional integration actualised through ASEAN and Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP). Intensification of Sino-US rivalry could have cascading ramifications for global supply chains, endangering economic vitality of the region as a whole. The growing bifurcation of regional economies into competing blocs reflects the emergence of techno-alliances, heightening concerns over a potential Sino-US technological decoupling. If this trend solidifies, it could create a Silicon Curtain, dividing the world into rival tech ecosystems. Such fragmentation may not only restrict cross-border innovation and collaboration but also limit states’ ability to harness high-tech advancements for socioeconomic development and human security.

Most importantly, Sino-US technological arms race might flare up into a full-blown conflict between both countries, as Kenneth Waltz once put it, ‘the origins of hot wars lie in cold wars.’ Trump 2.0 may have brought some degree of optimism in Eastern European and Middle Eastern theatre. Nevertheless, Sino-US rivalry in the Asia-Pacific is likely to intensify as evidenced by the emergence of China hawks in President Trump’s Cabinet such as Marco Rubio and Michael Waltz. To conclude, the high-tech factor in Asia-Pacific alliances reflects the militarisation of Industry 4.0 technologies in the context of a highly competitive international environment. Although states have a solemn right to modernise their militaries, excessive geopolitical balkanisation might undermine the vitality and relevance of multilateral institutions. Thus, the focus on relative gains should be balanced with a commitment to mutual benefit and a multilateral approach to uphold international peace and security.

Shah Muhammad is a Research Assistant at the Centre for Aerospace & Security Studies (CASS), Islamabad, Pakistan. The article was first published in Express Tribune. He can be reached at [email protected].


Share this article

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Recent Publications

Browse through the list of recent publications.

The West: The History of an Idea

The world is witnessing the collapse of the Western order, if not the emergence of an alternative one. The idea of ‘West’ as against the rest is still at the root of contemporary understanding of world politics. Georgios Varouxakis, a remarkable voice on Modernity and Nationalism, has provided the historical origins and modern connotations attached with the idea of ‘West’. In his book ‘The West: The History of an Idea’, Varouxakis has argued that the West is not an eternal entity, rather it is a modern socio-political construct that emerged in the political philosophy of the early 19th century and evolved with the passage of time. The book provides an in-depth historical analysis of the idea to determine the roots of its modern interpretation.

Read More »

Space-Enabled Warfare in the 21st Century: Pathways for Developing States

Space has emerged as a distinct domain of warfare alongside land, sea, air, and cyber. Developed countries like the United States, Russia, and China possess offensive and support capabilities in space. In the shadowed expanse of Low Earth Orbit (LEO), where satellites operate like silent custodians, the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine transformed the nature of modern conflict. As Russian troops marched forward, the commercial satellites like Maxar and Planet, which are operated by Western firms, captured high-resolution imagery of Russian troops, providing real-time intelligence to Ukrainian commanders, unlike ever before.

Read More »

The US-Israel War on Iran: Objectives, Strategy, and Escalation Management

Zahra Niazi
‘States tend to overestimate themselves or the benefits and swiftness of war, and to underestimate their opponents’ capabilities, intentions, or the costs and duration of war.’ If anything, the 2026 war initiated by the United States and Israel against Iran shall be remembered in the annals of warfare among the most visible manifestations of this dynamic.
The war, immediately preceded by the January mass protests in Iran, did not represent a sudden rupture but rather the continuation of a 47-year-long confrontation and a more intense phase of the June 2025 war.
The US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, defined the war’s objectives as being laser-focused: to destroy Iran’s missile capabilities and its security infrastructure, while ensuring that it could never develop nuclear weapons. Beyond these stated objectives, among the priorities on the continuum also lay the objective of regime change, with both President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu explicitly calling on the Iranian population to take over the government at the outset of the war.

Read More »