Flashpoint
South China Sea
S P
SETH
In the midst of so many crisis points in the world, the potential of
a sudden flare up in the South China Sea is not as seriously recognized, as it
should be. This flash point arises from China’s sovereignty claims to a cluster
of Islands in the South China Sea and the waters surrounding them, with some
regional countries, like the Philippines and Vietnam, contesting these claims.
China says that this region has always belonged to it historically and hence it
is not subject to any kind of negotiations, international arbitration or the UN
Convention on the Law of the Sea. And the islands and much of the South China
Sea being China’s sovereign territory and waters, it has the right to build up
military bases and structures on these and other artificial islands/reefs it
has dredged up.
Beijing particularly objects to US military involvement in the
region by strengthening its security ties with other countries that contest and
challenge China’s sovereignty claims. Washington, on the other hand, claims a
legitimate role in the region arising from significant economic, political and
strategic interests in the region, and is worried about China’s destabilizing
and threatening role It, therefore, favours a peaceful negotiated settlement of
the disputed issues between concerned countries based on international law to
ensure a stable regional environment. It has security treaties with some of the
regional states and is developing still closer relations with others. It is
against China unilaterally declaring the South China Sea islands and waters
around them as its sovereign territory, giving it the authority and power, if
it chooses to do so, to restrict freedom of navigation through these waters. About $5 trillion worth of international trade
is carried through South China Sea lanes---not to speak of naval movements through
these international waters. And the US is not going to let China restrict
passage through theses waters and has sought to assert this right by sending a
ship or two through, what China regards as, its sovereign territory. Beijing
regards this as provocative.
Lately, there has been an uptake in regional tensions with the strengthening
of the US-Philippines security ties, including joint naval and air patrols and
stationing of US military assets in the Philippines. During his recent visit to
the Philippines, US Defence Secretary, Ashton Carter, reportedly said that the
initial US air contingent will “conduct flight operations in the area,
including the South China Sea, and lay the foundation for joint air patrols to
complement ongoing maritime patrols.” The US will also establish a
command-and-control centre in the Philippines to co-ordinate the joint operations.
China hasn’t taken kindly to it. Reacting to it, China’s defence
ministry said that, “A strengthening of
the US-Philippine military alliance--- is a manifestation of the Cold War
mentality and is not conducive to peace and stability in the South China Sea.”
And it added: “ The Chinese army will monitor this trend closely, and will
resolutely safeguard China’s territorial sovereignty as well as maritime rights
and interests.”
President Obama announced the US’s “pivot” to Asia policy in
November 2011 during his Australia visit. In the decade before that the US had
been engaged militarily with two ongoing wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and was
now seeking to disengage from that region. With the US occupied in the Middle
East, China was successfully expanding its political, economic and military
space in the Asia Pacific region. It had never made secret of its sovereign
claims in the region but, under President Xi Jinping’s regime, a process of
assertive control of the South China Sea area by way of building artificial
islands and military structures was put in place to test, as if, the limits of
US power in the region. And that now is happening seriously, as indicated by
the upgrading of the US-Philippines military ties.
The US has other friends and allies in the region. Among them,
Australia is one of its most loyal allies going back to WW 11. Therefore, the
choice of Canberra to announce the ‘pivot’ to Asia seemed deliberate to assure
Australia and other others in the region Washington’s resolve to stay engaged
and not leave China to do as it pleased. It was followed up with a further
upgrading of US-Australia security ties with the announcement of rotation of US
troops through northern Australia and access to other facilities. China reacted
strongly to this, and Canberra’s criticism of its South China policy. Beijing
claims that the region has historically been part of China. And in any case,
Australia is not a disputant and should stay out of it.
Australia, more or less, follows the US position that Beijing’s
actions are destabilizing the region and that it is against China’s own
interests, because a stable Asia Pacific region in the last few decades has
worked to its advantage by fostering its economic growth. Hence, it is in
China’s interest to work through these issues peacefully with its regional
neighbours within the framework of international law. China finds these
arguments, by its proponents, self-serving to perpetuate status quo designed to
contain China’s rise. And it apparently wants to break through this
‘containment’ ring.
During his recent high-powered visit to China, with a large delegation
of business people, Australia’s Prime
Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, repeated the usual message of the need for peaceful
resolution of the sovereignty issue in the South China Sea, while emphasizing
the importance of their bilateral economic relationship. China is now
Australia’s largest trading partner with a healthy trade balance in Australia’s
favour. However, Beijing is unhappy about Australia’s even stronger strategic
nexus with the US against the backdrop of tensions in the South China Sea,
attributed to China’s muscular policy. But Beijing apparently believes that its
increasing economic leverage from Australia’s dependent trade relationship would
dent this nexus. Which is also worrying some in the US, as well as Australia’s
strategic community invested in the US-Australia security alliance. Canberra,
on the other hand, is equally hopeful that it can continue to have the best of
both worlds—an expanding trade relationship with China as well as the security
umbrella of the US alliance.
In a recent column in the Sydney Morning Herald, its international
editor, Peter Hartcher, was pleased with the way Canberra has so far
successfully done this balancing act. He, however, acknowledged that, “It is
possible that Australia could one day be forced to choose, but only if China
and the US break out into open war.” Which doesn’t bear thinking but the way
things are going, there is always of a danger of things just getting out of
control.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
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