The
Pentagon’s Great Wall of Impotence
By
Pepe Escobar
June
08, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "RT"
-
No one
ever lost money betting on the Pentagon
refraining from exceptionalist rhetoric.
Once
again the current Pentagon supremo, certified
neocon Ash Carter, did not disappoint at the
Shangri-La Dialogue – the annual, must-go
regional security forum in Singapore attended by
top defense ministers, scholars and business
executives from across Asia.
Context
is key. The Shangri-La Dialogue is organized by
the London-based International Institute for
Strategic Studies (IISS), which is essentially a
pro-Anglo-American think tank. And it takes
place in the privileged aircraft carrier of
imperial geostrategic interests in South East
Asia: Singapore.
As
expressed by neocon Carter, Pentagon rhetoric –
faithful to its own estimation of China as the
second biggest “existential threat” to
the US (Russia is first) – revolves around the
same themes; US military might and superiority
is bound to last forever; we are the “main
underwriter of Asian security” for, well,
forever; and China better behave in the South
China Sea – or else.
This is
all embedded in the much ballyhooed but so far
anemic “pivoting to Asia” advanced by
the lame duck Obama administration – but bound
to go on overdrive in the event Hillary Clinton
becomes the next tenant of 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue.
Real threats are predictably embedded in the
rhetoric. According to
Carter, if Beijing reclaims land in the
Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea,
“it will result in actions
being taken by the both United States and ... by
others in the region.”
What’s
left for China, in Pentagonese, is just to be a
member of a hazy “principled security
network” for Asia – which will also help
protect the East against “Russia’s worrying
actions”. Carter mentioned "principled"
no less than 37 times in his speech.
“Principled” cheerleaders so far include
Japan, India, the Philippines, Vietnam and
Australia.
So
here’s an instant translation: we do a NATO in
Asia; we control it; you will answer to us; and
then we encircle you – and Russia - for good. If
China says no, that’s simple. Carter proclaimed
Beijing will erect a "Great Wall of
self-isolation" in the South China Sea.
If this
is the best Pentagon planners have to counteract
the Russia-China strategic partnership, they’d
better go back to the classroom. In elementary
school.
Navigate in
freedom, dear vassals
Predictably, the South China Sea was quite big
at Shangri-La. The South China Sea, the
throughway of trillions of US dollars in annual
trade, doubles as home to a wealth of unexplored
oil and gas. Stagnated and increasingly
irrelevant Japan, via its Defense Minister Gen.
Nakatani, even advanced the Japanese would help
Southeast Asian nations build their
“security capabilities” to deal with what
he called “unilateral” and
“coercive” Chinese actions in the South
China Sea. Cynics could not help to draw
similarities with Imperial Japan’s
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
The
Beijing delegation kept its cool – to a point.
Rear Admiral Guan Youfei stressed, “The US
action to take sides is not agreed by many
countries.” Youfei – the head of the
Chinese office of international military
cooperation - did not refrain though from
condemning a “Cold War mentality” by
the usual suspects.
As for
Japan, China’s Foreign Ministry detailed that
“countries outside the region should stick
to their promises and not make thoughtless
remarks about issues of territorial
sovereignty.” Japan has absolutely nothing
to do with the South China Sea.
Beijing’s reclamation work on reefs in the South
China Sea naturally put it in direct conflict
with Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and
Brunei. So US meddling – under the convenient
cover of “freedom of navigation” – had
to be inevitable. “Freedom of navigation”
operations are a silly intimidation game in
which a US Navy ship or plane passes by a
Chinese-claimed island in the South China Sea.
It was up to Admiral Sun Jianguo, Deputy Chief
of the Joint Staff Department of China's Central
Military Commission, to cut to the chase,
stressing "the provocation of certain countries"
and adding that "selfish interests"
have led to the South China Sea issue becoming
"overheated". He slammed the Pentagon
for double standards and “irresponsible
behavior”. And he slammed the Philippines
for taking the conflict to a dubious UN
arbitration court after breaching a bilateral
agreement with China;
"We do not make trouble but we have no fear of
trouble."
The
Chinese position prefers
dialogue and cooperation – and Jianguo
re-stressed it, calling for ASEAN to make a
move. In fact China has already reached what is
called a four-point consensus with Brunei,
Cambodia and Laos on the South China Sea two
months ago. The Philippines are a much harder
nut to crack - as the Pentagon is taking no
prisoners to lead Manila “from behind”.
Even
Vietnam, via Deputy Defense Minister Nguyen Chi
Vinh, made it clear - in the same plenary
session as Admiral Jianguo - that Vietnam
prefers solutions via the UN Convention on the
Law of the Sea as well as negotiation between
China and ASEAN.
Bend over to
our rules – or else
After
Shangri-La’s rhetorical excesses, the action
moved to Beijing, the site of the 8th China-US Strategic
and Development Dialogue. That’s the annual
talkfest
launched in 2009 by Obama and then Chinese
President Hu Jintao.
Chinese
Vice Foreign Minister Zheng Zeguang painted a
rosy picture, stressing the exchange of
“candid, in-depth views on important and
sensitive issues of shared concern.”
Chinese Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai once
again needed to point out that the relationship
is just "too important" to be
"hijacked" by the South China Sea. And yet
this is exactly the Pentagon’s agenda.
Beijing
though won’t be derailed. As State Councilor
Yang Jiechi put it, ASEAN-China dialogue is
progressing via what Beijing calls the
“dual-track” approach, according to which
disputes are negotiated between the parties
directly involved. That implies no Washington
interference.
Beyond
what is discussed either at Shangri-La or at the
China-US dialogue, the Big Picture is clear. ‘Exceptionalistan’ planners
have molded a narrative where China is being
forced to make a choice; either you bend over
to “our” rules – as in the current
unipolar geostrategic game – or else.
Well,
Beijing has already made its own choice; and
that entails a multipolar world of sovereign
nations with no primus inter pares. The Beijing
leadership under Xi Jinping clearly sees how the
so-called international “order”,
actually disorder, is a rigged system set up at
the end of WWII.
Wily
Chinese diplomacy – and trade - knows how to use
the system to advance Chinese national
interests. That’s how modern China became the
“savior” of global turbo-capitalism.
But that does not mean a resurgent China will
forever comply with these extraneous “rules”
– not to mention the morality lessons. Beijing
knows ‘Exceptionalistan’ would not
agree even to divide the spoils in a
geopolitical spheres-of-influence arrangement.
Plan A in Washington is containment – with
possibly dangerous ramifications. There is no
Plan B.
The
bottom line – thinly disguised by the somewhat
polite responses to Pentagon threats - is that
Beijing simply won’t accept anymore a
geopolitical disorder that it did not create.
The Chinese could not give a damn to the New
World Order (NWO) dreamed up by selected
‘Masters of the Universe’. Beijing is engaged in
building a new, multipolar order. No wonder –
alongside with strategic partner Russia – they
are and will continue to be the Pentagon’s top
twin threat.
Pepe
Escobar is an independent geopolitical analyst.
He writes for RT, Sputnik and TomDispatch, and
is a frequent contributor to websites and radio
and TV shows ranging from the US to East Asia.
He is the former roving correspondent for Asia
Times Online. Born in Brazil, he's been a
foreign correspondent since 1985, and has lived
in London, Paris, Milan, Los Angeles,
Washington, Bangkok and Hong Kong. Even before
9/11 he specialized in covering the arc from the
Middle East to Central and East Asia, with an
emphasis on Big Power geopolitics and energy
wars. He is the author of "Globalistan" (2007),
"Red Zone Blues" (2007), "Obama does Globalistan"
(2009) and "Empire of Chaos" (2014), all
published by Nimble Books. His latest book is
"2030", also by Nimble Books, out in December
2015.