Are we
Truly Ready for the Consequences of a War with
China?
By Nick Xenophon
April
25, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- We are faced today with a question that has
never before arisen in our history. From January
1788, when the First Fleet sailed into Botany
Bay, to 2008, during the Global Financial
Crisis, we've had first Britain and then the USA
as both trading partner and strategic ally.
But now
China is our largest two-way trading partner in
goods and services ($150 billion), our largest
export market ($86 billion) and our largest
source of imports ($64 billion). And the
integrated East Asian economic zone is the
world's fastest growing.
So, how
do we negotiate the tension between our major
security partner and our major trading partner?
China
sees as vital to its security the string of
archipelagos from northern Borneo to the Kuril
Islands north-east of Japan. It has piled sand
onto reefs in the South China Sea, creating
seven new artificial islands, and has installed
missile batteries and radar facilities, giving
it effective control over sea and air traffic in
the region.
Earlier
this year US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
said he wanted to "send China a clear signal
that, first, the island-building stops, and
second, your access to those islands also is not
going to be allowed."
Two
weeks later, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said
in Los Angeles that "most nations wish to see
more United States leadership, not less, and
have no desire to see powers other than the US,
calling the shots."
Increased tension between the US and China seems
inevitable, and Australia may well get dragged
in.
Last
year the RAND Corporation published a report
called
"War with
China: Thinking Through the Unthinkable".
It makes sobering reading. Their research team
concluded that "war between the two countries
[the US and China] could be intense, last a year
or more, have no winner, and inflict huge losses
and costs on both sides."
China's
defensive military capabilities will continue to
increase, and it will be able to inflict heavy
losses on its opponents.
As both
sides' technologies and doctrine create a
preference for striking first, the potential for
miscalculation is high. Each side may believe
that by striking first it can gain and retain
the initiative, and by doing so it might be able
to end a conflict quickly.
Yet
this kind of thinking has uncomfortable
parallels with Europe of a century ago, when the
belligerents initiated their own military plans
to attack before being attacked, and both sides
believed that in doing so they would gain
operational dominance and end the war swiftly.
Back then, both sides had strong economic ties,
which 'experts' said would prevent any conflict.
Furthermore, using the line and military
strategy attributed to Sun Tzu, China may decide
to "kill the chicken to scare the monkey" – sink
an Australian vessel to warn off the United
States Navy.
Are we
truly ready for the consequences of a war?
Unlike Afghanistan and Iraq, where there were
relatively few casualties, this time we may see
large numbers of body bags returning, or never
returning at all, since they may have been sunk
at sea.
Is
Australia ready for a relentless parade of
funerals? For calls from the extreme political
fringe for Chinese Australians to be interned in
camps? For India reinforcing its troops along
its border with China? For Russia to be
emboldened along its western border? For
increased activity in the Middle East, as
extremists there take advantage of US
preoccupation in the South China Sea? We already
know what the invasion of Iraq unleashed.
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And
back home the consequences would be
catastrophic, both for our economy and society.
RAND
said a US-China war could shrink China's GDP by
up to 35 per cent and the USA's by up to 10 per
cent. But given our much higher trade dependence
on China and the region, a 30 per cent
contraction would not be out of the question.
And
demographically? Seeing Chinese Australians and
Chinese students on our streets shows how
integral they've become to our nation's fabric.
A war
with China would rip Australia's economy and
society apart.
The
signals we send to either side about Australia's
position are of the highest economic and
strategic significance. What we do requires
extensive consideration in the Australian
Parliament. Contrary to public belief, the ANZUS
Treaty doesn't commit the US to come to our
assistance, or us to theirs – only to "act to
meet the common danger in accordance with [our]
constitutional processes".
Australia alone should decide which wars we go
to, and the circumstances in which we go to
them. That goes to the heart of our sovereignty.
Australia must not get involved in a South China
Sea conflict until every member of the
Australian Parliament has voted on it, and
explained their reasons individually – not hide
behind a party line.
What's
more, that process should be enshrined in
Australian legislation; no Australian military
actions ought to occur without parliamentary
authorisation, except in self-defence. More than
ever, since 1788, it's a law whose time has
come.
Nick
Xenophon is a South Australian Senator. This is
an edited version of a speech given at
Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
This article was first published by
The Age
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.