"The US must take more seriously the strategic challenges posed by China's One Belt One Road (OBOR) initiative," Ashley Tellis of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace told lawmakers during a Congressional hearing organised by the Senate Armed Services Committee.
To date, he said, Washington has addressed this effort only absentmindedly, given its preoccupation until recently with the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
"The scale of the OBOR program is indeed mind-boggling: the China Development Bank alone is expected to underwrite some 900 components of the initiative at a cost of close to a trillion dollars; other funders, such as the China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China will commit additional resources, with the anticipated cumulative investment eventually reaching anywhere from USD 4 to 8 trillion," Tellis said.
Tellis said thus far, the economic dimensions - and the political daring - underlying this effort have received great attention to the relative neglect of its geostrategic consequences for China's rise as a global power, political competition within Asia, the impact on America's regional friends and allies, and US military operations in and around Eurasia.
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"Even as this understanding is developed, the US should look for ways to provide the Asian states with alternative options to China's OBOR, even if initially only on a smaller scale," Tellis told lawmakers.
"China's actions aren't limited to pursuing its claims and trying to extend its zone of effective control in the maritime domain. Along its land frontiers, Beijing has also unveiled a hugely ambitious set of infrastructure development plans. The so-called one belt one road initiative, which aims to transform the economic and strategic geography of much of Eurasia.
"China's leaders have begun to articulate their vision for a new Eurasian order, a system of infrastructure networks, regional free trade areas, new rules written in Beijing and mechanisms for political consultation, all with China at the center and the US pushed the periphery, if not out of the region altogether," Friedberg added.
The initiative, known as the revival of the ancient Silk Road trading route, would link Asian markets with economic groups in Europe.
With nearly three billion people inhabiting areas covered by the proposed economic belt, it represents the biggest market in the world with unparallelled potential.