Geopolitics & Power
The Overreach:
How Two Asian Giants
Misread Their Strategic Hands
Japan and India each leveraged a historic moment to build formidable positions-and each discovered that Washington’s strategic patience has limits when its own interests are fundamentally threatened.
Strategic Affairs • Long Read • Analysis
The history of great-power competition is littered with nations that mistook temporary advantage for permanent dominance, or assumed that geopolitical utility could indefinitely excuse ideological excess. Two of Asia’s most significant powers-Japan and India-offer instructive parallels in strategic overreach. Both leveraged historical moments to build formidable economic or geopolitical positions. Both, in their hubris, misread the tolerance of their patrons. And both discovered that Washington’s strategic patience has limits when its own interests-or values-are fundamentally threatened.
Case File I
Japan: From Oil Shock Triumph to Semiconductor Hubris
The Auto Revolution
The 1973 oil shock was a watershed moment that Japan converted into a generational advantage. While American automakers were building gas-guzzling land yachts, Japanese manufacturers had already invested in fuel-efficient, reliable compact cars. When oil prices quadrupled, Detroit was caught catastrophically flat-footed.
22%
U.S. market share captured by Japanese automakers by the mid-1980s
This success wasn’t merely about luck. Japanese industrial policy-through MITI-had nurtured domestic champions, protected infant industries with tariff barriers, and facilitated technology transfer through strategic licensing agreements. By the time American firms recognized the competitive threat, Japanese automakers had already established manufacturing excellence and brand loyalty that would endure for decades.
The Semiconductor Gamble
Emboldened by automotive success, Japan turned its sights on what was becoming the crown jewel of American technology: semiconductors. Through the VLSI consortium and aggressive process innovation, Japanese firms achieved what American manufacturers initially dismissed as impossible. By 1986, Japanese companies commanded 80% of the global DRAM market. Hewlett-Packard’s internal testing confirmed that Japanese-made chips had failure rates sometimes six times lower than American alternatives.
This dominance represented a direct challenge to American technological sovereignty at a moment when semiconductors were becoming foundational to both civilian and military applications.
The Reagan administration-initially a champion of free markets-responded with unprecedented intervention. Citing dumping margins as high as 180%, the U.S. launched the largest anti-dumping investigation in history and forced Japan into the 1986 U.S.-Japan Semiconductor Agreement. The measures fundamentally undermined Japanese competitiveness.
The South Korean Pivot
The most consequential-and often overlooked-element of America’s response was the deliberate cultivation of South Korea as a counterweight. As Japanese firms were forced to restrict production, Korean companies expanded aggressively to fill the vacuum. Samsung licensed 64K DRAM designs from Micron; SK Hynix acquired technology from Texas Instruments; IBM sold chip production technology to Samsung with Wall Street capital flowing in behind.
By 1992, Samsung launched the world’s first 64M DRAM. By 1996, it had mass-produced 1GB DRAM, pushing South Korea’s global DRAM market share from under 5% in the 1980s to over 30% by the mid-1990s. Japan’s semiconductor market share collapsed to less than half its peak within a decade. Combined with the Plaza Accord’s yen appreciation, Japan entered what would become known as the “Lost Decades.”
The lesson was brutal: Japan’s model had succeeded brilliantly in catching up, but failed catastrophically when it threatened to surpass its patron. Washington didn’t merely protect its market; it actively engineered a competitor to ensure Japanese dominance could never recur.
Case File II
India: The Anti-China Card and the Limits of Transactional Alignment
The Strategic Wager
India’s contemporary foreign policy operates on a seemingly straightforward proposition: its role as a democratic counterweight to China in the Indo-Pacific is so strategically valuable that Washington will overlook almost any domestic transgression. For two decades, this bet has paid dividends-the U.S.-India strategic partnership launched in 2005, defense cooperation frameworks, and the revitalized Quad in 2020 all reflect Washington’s calculation that a stronger India serves American interests regardless of other concerns.
India’s leadership has operated with increasing confidence that this geopolitical utility provides immunity from criticism. The Hindu Right has embraced Trumpist rhetoric, perceiving an ideological ally who would “mute criticism of India’s democratic backsliding and handling of human rights, and deliver new economic opportunities.”
The Democratic Erosion
Yet the evidence of democratic backsliding has become impossible to ignore, even for partners inclined to look away. Successive U.S. administrations have documented concerns including “democratic backsliding and infringements on religious freedom,” alongside friction over trade barriers, Russia ties, and visa disputes. Secretary Blinken’s 2021 visit to New Delhi was carefully choreographed to address these concerns while maintaining the strategic partnership’s momentum.
Washington’s long-term bet on India has been explicitly framed as support for “a stronger and more prosperous democratic India”-the democratic qualifier is not decorative.
When scholar Ashley Tellis argued in Foreign Affairs that the United States had made a “bad bet on India”-contending that New Delhi would not meaningfully assist in a Taiwan contingency-it signaled that strategic altruism was ending.
The Miscalculation
India’s fundamental error mirrors Japan’s: the assumption that tactical indispensability creates strategic impunity. If India’s domestic trajectory-Hindutva ideology, erosion of minority rights, and democratic norm collapse-undermines the very “democratic India” rationale that elevated the partnership, Washington’s patience will thin.
Just as the U.S. actively cultivated South Korea to replace Japan in semiconductors, America has alternative partners in the Indo-Pacific-Vietnam, Australia, Japan itself-that can fulfill aspects of India’s geopolitical role without the democratic baggage. The Quad doesn’t require Indian participation to function; it merely benefits from it.
The Verdict
Patron-Client Realism: The Common Thread
Closing Argument
Both Japan and India illustrate a persistent feature of American hegemony: the United States actively manages the distribution of power among allies to prevent any single partner from achieving independent dominance or deviating from core norms. Japan learned this through economic warfare – its semiconductor supremacy dismantled not because it was inefficient, but because it was too efficient. The U.S. didn’t merely protect its market; it transferred the crown to a more compliant junior partner. India is learning the same lesson through political conditionality – its anti-China card genuine but not infinite.
The ultimate irony is that both nations, in their overreach, forced Washington to reveal the conditional nature of its patronage. The lesson is identical: in an American-led order, there is no permanent immunity for strategic overreach – whether economic or ideological. The stick awaits those who mistake tolerance for permission.