Approaching Dangerous Seas
It's not just the chilling rhetoric. In the past
five months, warships from both sides have done
everything but ram one another.
By Conn Hallinan
August 19,
2013 "Information
Clearing House"
- "FPIF"
- A combination of recent events, underpinned by
long-running historical strains reaching back
more than 60 years, has turned the western
Pacific into one of the most hazardous spots on
the globe. The tension between China and the
United States “is one of the most striking and
dangerous themes in international politics,”
says The Financial Times’ longtime
commentator and China hand,
Gideon Rachman.
In just
the past five months, warships from both
countries—including Washington’s closest ally in
the region, Japan—have done everything but ram
one another. And, as Beijing continues to build
bases on scattered islands in the South China
Sea, the United States is deploying long-range
nuclear capable strategic bombers in
Australia and
Guam.
At
times the rhetoric from both sides is chilling.
When Washington sent two aircraft carrier battle
groups into the area, Chinese defense ministry
spokesman Yang Yujun cautioned the Americans to
“be careful.” While one U.S. admiral
suggested drawing
“the line” at the Spratly Islands close to
the Philippines, an editorial in the Chinese
Communist Party’s
Global Times warned that U.S.
actions “raised the risk of physical
confrontation with China.” The newspaper went on
to warn that “if the United States’ bottom line
is that China has to halt its activities, then a
U.S.-China war is inevitable in the South China
Sea.”
Earlier this month China’s Defense Minister
Chang Wanquan said Beijing should prepare for a
“people’s war at sea.”
Add to
this the appointment of an extreme right-wing
nationalist as Japan’s defense minister and the
decision to deploy anti-ballistic missile
interceptors in South Korea and the term
“volatile region” is a major understatement.
A History
of Conflict
Some of
these tensions go back to the 1951 Treaty of San
Francisco that formally ended World War II in
Asia. That document, according to Canadian
researcher
Kimie Hara, was drawn up to be deliberately
ambiguous about the ownership of a scatter of
islands and reefs in the East and South China
seas. That ambiguity set up tensions in the
region that Washington could then exploit to
keep potential rivals off balance.
The current standoff between China and Japan
over the Senkakus/Diaoyu islands—the Japanese
use the former name, the Chinese the latter—is a
direct outcome of the treaty. Although
Washington has no official position on which
country owns the tiny uninhabited archipelago,
it is committed to defend Japan in case of any
military conflict with China. On Aug. 2 the
Japanese Defense Ministry accused China of
engaging in “dangerous acts that could cause
unintended consequences.”
Tokyo’s
new defense minister,
Tomomi Inada, is a regular visitor to the
Yasukuni shrine that honors Japan’s war
criminals, and she is a critic of the post-war
Tokyo war crimes trials. She has also called for
re-examining the 1937 Nanjing massacre that saw
Japanese troops murder as many as 300,000
Chinese. Her appointment by Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe seems almost calculated to anger
Beijing.
Abe is
also pushing hard to overturn a part of the
Japanese constitution that bars Tokyo from using
its military forces for anything but defending
itself. Japan has one of the largest and most
sophisticated navies in the world.
Over
the past several weeks, Chinese Coast Guard
vessels and fishing boats have challenged
Japan’s territorial claims on the islands, and
Chinese and Japanese warplanes have been playing
chicken. In one particularly worrisome incident,
a Japanese fighter locked its combat radar on a
Chinese fighter-bomber.
Behind
the bellicose behavior on the China and U.S.
sides is underlying insecurity, a dangerous
condition when two nuclear-armed powers are at
loggerheads.
Containment Updated
From
Beijing’s perspective, Washington is trying to
“contain” China by ringing it with American
allies, much as the United States did to the
Soviet Union during the Cold War. Given recent
moves in the region, it is hard to argue with
Beijing’s conclusion.
After a
20-year absence, the U.S. military is back in
the Philippines. Washington is deploying
anti-missile systems in South Korea and Japan
and deepening its military relations with
Australia, Vietnam, Indonesia, and India. The
Obama administration’s “Asia pivot” has
attempted to shift the bulk of U.S. armed forces
from the Atlantic and the Middle East to Asia.
Washington’s Air Sea Battle strategy—just
renamed “Joint Concept for Access and Maneuver
in the Global Commons”—envisions neutralizing
China’s ability to defend its home waters.
China
is in the process of modernizing much of its
military, in large part because Beijing was
spooked by two American operations. First,
the Chinese were stunned by how quickly the U.S.
military annihilated the Iraqi army in the first
Gulf War, with virtually no casualties on the
American side. Then there was having to back
down in 1996, when the Clinton administration
deployed two aircraft carrier battle groups in
the Taiwan Straits during a period of sharp
tension between Beijing and Taipei.
In
spite of all its upgrades, however, China’s
military is a long way from challenging the
United States. The Chinese navy has one small
aircraft carrier, the United States has 10
enormous ones, plus a nuclear arsenal vastly
bigger than Beijing’s modest force. China’s last
war was its disastrous 1979 invasion of Vietnam,
and the general U.S. view of the Chinese
military is that it is a paper dragon.
That
thinking is paralleled in Japan, which is
worrisome. Japan’s aggressive nationalist
government is more likely to initiate something
with China than is the United States. For
instance, Japan started the crisis over the
Senkaku/Diaoyus. First, Tokyo violated an
agreement with Beijing by arresting some Chinese
fishermen and then unilaterally annexed the
islands. The Japanese military has always had an
over-inflated opinion of itself and
traditionally underestimated Chinese
capabilities.
In
short, the United States and Japan are not
intimidated by China’s New Model Army, nor do
they see it as a serious threat. That is
dangerous thinking if it leads to the conclusion
that China will always back down when a
confrontation turns ugly. Belligerence and
illusion are perilous companions in the current
tense atmosphere.
Rising
Risk of Nuclear War
The
scheduled deployment of the U.S. Theater High
Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile
systems has convinced Beijing that the United
States is attempting to neutralize China’s
nuclear missile force, not an irrational
conclusion. Although anti-missile systems are
billed as “defensive,” they can just as easily
be considered part of the basic U.S.
“counterforce” strategy. The latter calls for a
first strike on an opponent’s missiles,
backstopped by an anti-ballistic missile system
that would destroy any enemy missiles the first
strike missed.
China
is pledged not to use nuclear weapons first. But
given the growing ring of U.S. bases and
deployment of anti-missile systems, that may
change. It is considering moving to a
“launch-on-warning” strategy, which would
greatly increase the possibility of an
accidental nuclear war.
The
AirSea Battle strategy calls for conventional
missile strikes aimed at knocking out command
centers and radar facilities deep in Chinese
territory. But given the U.S. “counterforce”
strategy, Chinese commanders might assume that
those conventional missiles are nuclear-tipped
and aimed at decapitating China’s nuclear
deterrent.
According to Amitai Etzioni of Washington
University, a former senior advisor to President
Jimmy Carter, “China is likely to respond to
what is effectively a major attack on its
mainland with all the military means at its
disposal—including its stockpile of nuclear
arms.”
A
report by the
Union of Concerned Scientists concluded that
if China moves to “launch on warning,” such a
change “would dramatically increase the risk of
a nuclear exchange by accident—a dangerous shift
that the U.S. could help to avert.”
President Obama is said to be considering
adopting a “no-first-use” pledge, but he has
come up against stiff opposition from his
military and the Republicans. “I would be
concerned about such a policy,” says U.S. Air
Force Secretary
Deborah Lee James. “Having a certain degree
of ambiguity is not necessarily a bad thing.”
But
given the possibility of accidents—or panic by
military commanders—”ambiguity” increases the
risk that someone could misinterpret an action.
Once a nuclear exchange begins it may be
impossible to stop, particularly since the U.S.
“counterforce” strategy targets an opponent’s
missiles. “Use them, or lose them” is an old
saying among nuclear warriors.
In any
case, the standard response to an anti-missile
system is to build more launchers and warheads,
something the world does not need more of.
China
Alienates the Region
Although China has legitimate security concerns,
the way it has pursued them has won it few
friends in the region. Beijing has bullied
Vietnam in the Paracel islands, pushed the
Philippines around in the Spratly islands, and
pretty much alienated everyone in the region
except its
close allies in North Korea, Laos, and
Cambodia. China’s claims—its so-called “nine
dash line”—covers most the South China Sea, an
area through which some
$5 trillion in trade passes each year. It is
also an area rich in minerals and fishing
resources.
China’s
ham-fisted approach has given the United States
an opportunity to inject itself into the dispute
as a “defender” of small countries with their
own claims on reefs, islands, and shoals. The
United States has stepped up air and sea patrols
in the region, which at times has seen Chinese
and American and Japanese
warships bow to bow and their
warplanes wing tip to wing tip.
The
recent decision by the Permanent Court of
Arbitration at The Hague that China has no
exclusive claim on the South China Sea has
temporarily increased tensions, although it has
the potential to resolve some of the ongoing
disputes without continuing the current saber
rattling.
China
is a signatory to the 1982 Law of the Sea
Treaty, as are other countries bordering the
South China Sea (the U.S. Senate refuses to
ratify the treaty). China has never tried to
interfere with the huge volume of commerce that
traverses the region, trade that, in any case,
greatly benefits the Chinese. Beijing’s
major concern is defending its long coastline.
If the
countries in the region would rely on the Law of
the Sea to resolve disputes, it would probably
work out well for everyone concerned. The
Chinese would have to back off from their
“nine-dash-line” claims in the South China Sea,
but they would likely end up in control of the
Senkakus/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea.
But to
cool the current tensions Washington would also
have to ratchet down its military buildup in
Asia. That will be difficult for the Americans
to accept. Since the end of World War II, the
U.S. has been the big dog on the block in the
western Pacific, but that is coming to an end.
According to the International Monetary Fund,
China surpassed the U.S. economy in 2014 to
become the world’s largest. Of the four largest
economies on the globe, three are in Asia:
China, Japan, and India.
Simple
demographics are shifting the balance of
economic and political power from Europe and the
United States to Asia. By 2015, more than 66
percent of the world’s population will reside in
Asia. In contrast, the United States makes up 5
percent and the European Union 7 percent. By
2050, the world’s “pin code” will be 1125: one
billion people in Europe, one billion in the
Americas, two billion in Africa, and five
billion in Asia. Even the CIA predicts, “The era
of American ascendancy in international politics
that began in 1945—is fast winding down.”
The
U.S. can resist that inevitability, but only by
relying on its overwhelming military power and
constructing an alliance system reminiscent of
the Cold War. That should give pause to all
concerned. The world was fortunate to emerge
from that dark period without a nuclear war, but
relying on luck is a dangerous strategy.
Conn Hallinan can be read at
dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and
middleempireseries.wordpress.com