Meanwhile, in the South China Sea: “Forget the US”
posted at 6:53 pm on July 18, 2011 by J.E. Dyer
[ Diplomacy ]
Senator James Webb (D-VA) told David Gregory on Meet the Press three weeks ago that he thinks the US is facing a “Munich moment” with China in Southeast Asia. While no exact analogy is on the horizon to the original Munich moment – Neville Chamberlain proclaiming “peace in our time” after agreeing with Hitler to the partition of Czechoslovakia – Webb’s larger point is that China’s career of aggression in the South China Sea needs checking.
Recent activity
Perhaps a better analogy would be calling the current situation in the South China Sea a prospective remilitarization-of-the-Rhine moment. In any case, Webb is right that there are things to worry about. China has been systematically occupying and fortifying tiny islands in the Paracel and Spratly chains for decades, as have other claimants like Vietnam and the Philippines. But growing Chinese aggression against the maritime activities of Vietnam, which has included damaging the equipment of oil exploration vessels and attacking Vietnamese fishing ships, has the region on edge.
China has also, in 2010 and 2011, conducted two lengthy naval exercises in which her naval task force drilled in the Miyako Strait in the Japanese archipelago. (During the most recent one, in June 2011, the Chinese were observed launching a maritime drone from one of the ships while operating near Japanese territory.) Coincident with the task force deployment, China’s special forces conducted their first-ever joint training with the special forces of Indonesia, an interesting and high-profile rapprochement between two nations that in many ways have kept a wary distance for decades.
At the end of the exercise period (mid-June was a busy time for China’s maritime assertiveness program), the patrol ship Haixun-31, nominally a fisheries protection/maritime security vessel, conducted a patrol of disputed waters in the Spratly and Paracel Islands on the way to and from a port visit in Singapore. Singapore had not been told in advance that the ship would be performing this mission, and was thus put in a difficult diplomatic situation, ultimately lodging a protest over the implication of Singapore in Beijing’s assertion of excessive maritime claims.
While this Chinese action may seem to Americans like the least significant among recent events, it is in some ways the most important. Singapore, located at the eastern entrance to the Strait of Malacca (SOM), has long maintained a careful neutrality on the most freighted regional issues – and has been bolstered in this posture by the United States. Singapore’s independence and neutrality are guarantors of international access to the SOM, a linchpin of US security policy in the region. Singapore makes it a point to get along with everyone, but to be in no one’s pocket; her arrangements with the US are friendly and of long standing, but do not involve a defense treaty like the ones we have with the Philippines, Thailand, and Japan.
But Singapore is tiny; her independent status is largely a quiescent artifact of the Pax Americana in the region. A diplomatic raid on Singapore’s neutrality – effectively what the Chinese patrol ship’s visit amounted to – is a shot across the bow of the status quo. Everyone in the region has known for decades that China wants to have her excessive maritime claims acknowledged, but a sneak attack on Singapore’s neutrality ratchets things up to a higher level. This move went straight for the central strategic interest of the US: the Strait of Malacca.
A game-changing maritime move
The next milestone in China’s effort to assert sovereignty over the South China Sea is anticipated to be the installation of a one-of-a-kind drilling platform in an area of the Spratly archipelago that falls in the Philippine economic exclusion zone (EEZ) (see map for approximate location). The giant semi-submersible platform is reportedly to be towed out from China and installed this month. If Marine Oil 981 is indeed towed to the proposed site, it is not clear what will be done about it. The Philippines has dispatched naval forces to patrol the waters in her EEZ, but in a naval confrontation with China, the Philippine navy would have no chance.
Yet this is the move that cannot be allowed to stand. The maritime claims on which China bases her assertion of the right to install this platform are excessive by the terms of the UN Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and conflict with the claims of the other nations with extensive coastlines on the South China Sea (see also here, and see map below). If China can force Marine Oil 981 on the region, without effective pushback, Chinese power will make the incremental but game-changing shift from regional challenger to regional arbiter of the status quo.
Hillary Clinton is attending the ASEAN conference this week in Indonesia, where the most important topic will be sorting out the South China Sea. Her foray into this topic at last year’s ASEAN summit was decidedly ham-handed, sending “shock waves” through East Asia (the consensus of Asian opinion media) with the implication that the US was suddenly interested in arbitrating the disputed claims in the region. We can hope that this year’s expressions of American policy are more felicitous. We can also hope that a series of US Naval exercises with Vietnam, the Philippines, Australia, and others will act as a deterrent.
But Asians are by no means sanguine about that effect. At a recent conference on defense topics held in the Philippines, a retired Indian general officer said of the prospect that the US might intervene to block China: “Forget the U.S. It will not happen. They are going to sleep.” Perhaps it’s too soon to render this judgment, but Jim Webb has good reason to be worried. China is pushing harder, in spite of the toughness putatively being displayed by the US with our joint military exercises around China’s perimeter.
Strategic considerations
And the stakes are high. Analysts tend to focus on the economic aspect of the South China Sea disputes, in part because raw materials are the principal issue for most of the claimants. But for China, that’s only part of the story. This recent article highlights the significance of the South China Sea to China’s security posture; while I am undecided as to how much China wants to use the sea as a “bastion” for ballistic-missile submarines (it’s not an absurd idea, but has drawbacks), the point that China sees naval control of the sea as paramount is well taken. By exercising control of the Spratlys, Paracels, and other islands inside the “U-line” of her maritime claims, China could keep shipping through the area under a 24/7 threat from cruise missiles deployed in the islands.
China’s intentions for the South China Sea are not analogous to America’s in the Gulf of Mexico; we neither exercise nor seek to exercise the same kind of positive control beyond the limits of our recognized claims. Independent of US policy, the first objectors to China’s posture in Southeast Asia are the other nations with legitimate EEZ claims, on which China proposes to infringe. The South China Sea dispute is about whether the US will enforce an international “rule of law” environment in which longstanding conventions are honored, smaller nations are not imposed upon, and threats to shipping are not allowed to gain the upper hand.
Richard Fernandez is concerned that the US national debt, and Obama’s hope to expand it by borrowing more from China, will determine the outcome of the South China Sea drama. And China may well wait out the ASEAN conference and the 2 August debt-mageddon date before deciding when to haul Marine Oil 981 down to the Philippine EEZ. But if it is installed, media silence in the US will not be able to obscure the significance of the shift in the power calculus. Putting more US Navy ships in the area, exercising with the nations of the region, complaining publicly about China’s behavior – all of these are poor substitutes for blocking China’s big move before it happens. We must hope that can be achieved.
J.E. Dyer’s articles have appeared at The Green Room, Commentary’s “contentions,” Patheos, The Weekly Standard online, and her own blog, The Optimistic Conservative.













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Very interesting post.
In this context, as well as what Iran may want to do to close off the Straits of Hormuz, I would like to remind everyone that Ron Paul, along with Dennis Kucinich and Barney Frank, thinks we should scrap %25 of the Carrier Battle Groups, Marine Expeditionary Units, and the submarine fleet.
This is insane.
Brian1972 on July 18, 2011 at 7:32 PM
Brian1972 on July 18, 2011 at 7:32 PM
Years ago (I want to say in the early 1970′s) William F. Buckley asked how long it would be before one of the radical Muslim nations realized they could cripple the west by making the Straits of Hormuz impassable. I’m surprised that Iran hasn’t tried before, but with Mr. Obeyme in the White House, I’m quite certain he’d cave if it were to happen. After all, the EnviroNazis don’t want us to use our on resources, and President Obeyme certainly doesn’t want to upset his constituents in the “57 states”.
“The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC; Arabic: منظمة التعاون الاسلامي; French: Organisation de la Coopération Islamique [OCI])[a 1] is an international organisation consisting of 57 member states…”
Quoted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organisation_of_the_Islamic_Conference
oldleprechaun on July 18, 2011 at 8:56 PM
Talk about depressing. I see it more as a pure oil grab than a Kara/White Sea-style ballistic sub bastion though – there’s too much land that is not under ChiCom control especially as one heads south toward Malaysia.
Steve Eggleston on July 18, 2011 at 9:12 PM
Steve, the extra territory sets up an outer perimeter defense. For China to engage USN CVBGs with ballistic missiles take real-time links. A distributed sensor net is a big assist. The resources are also handy, as their economy vacuums up raw materials.
The US Navy’s War College Review has been looking at this for over a decade.
BTW, great job on those WI posts. You were most informative.
NaCly dog on July 18, 2011 at 9:37 PM
Each of the countries with a legitimate claim to the area has the resources to protect that claim. Let the US navy be a backstop, but not protect the area the same way it protected Europe. Those countries with the claim need as much, or more, skin in the game.
cozmo on July 18, 2011 at 9:38 PM
The Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam have tiny Navies. I know, sucks to be them. But Japan and S. Korea have major shipping lanes through the South China Sea. The USN is involved.
NaCly dog on July 18, 2011 at 10:15 PM
Very good article. I have been following this for years as I currently live in the area and did three military tours in an effort to keep at least part of Viet Nam from becoming a Chinese puppet. I was talking to a Vietnamese Senor Colonel/in-law a few days ago. I made a toast to peace and us never having to be real soldiers again. He sadly shook his head before he drank the toast. My next toast was, “If we can’t have peace, then Victory.” He was a lot more enthusiastic about that one.
I believe that China is acting about 10 years too early. The issue is that If ASEAN and the other affected countries act together and impose a blockade of Chinese destined and departing shipping, China will be destroyed as a functioning nation with in weeks or no more than a few months. China’s survival depends on the food, oil and other supplies carried on those ships. If you look closely at the map you provide, it becomes obvious how difficult it is for China to escape a blockade. The choke points are a thousand miles or more from China and quite small and easy to close and defend.
What America and hopefully the other Nuclear Powers must do is to place a Nuclear umbrella over the War-zone. China and North Korea are the only two Nuclear Powers in the area and they must not be allowed to use nuclear weapons in this war. ASEAN and the rest can then do the job. American satellite intelligence would be a big help but not decisive as would American logistic support.
Linh_My on July 18, 2011 at 10:43 PM
This looks like a very plausible geopolitical genesis point for World War IV.
cane_loader on July 19, 2011 at 3:46 AM
Just as I said it would. This is one place where the US doesn’t have to take the lead though. The countries involved are cooperating and their combined naval forces should be a match for the Chinese.
I think, for now, its more of a case of how much China can get away with. Like it did with the P-3/J-8 incident and the “bumping” that Chinese ships try on what they see as interlopers.
Good stuff, is it acting 10 years to early though? In that time Japan will have four (?) carriers with F-35′s and the Chinese may have one, not counting the Varyag. I would think, due to distance, the carriers would be necessary to harass the naval base on Hainan. The Chinese are patient, but do they see the current situation as their window of opportunity?
cozmo on July 19, 2011 at 9:27 AM
One of a half dozen IMO. There’s the fact that we’ve utterly failed to bring lasting peace in Iraq or Afghanistan, both of which will soon crumble as soon as we finally have to leave.
Also, the Euroweenies could pose a juicy target for Russia, if they can pull their shattered nation together again in time to take advantage of the financial collapse. Even worse, England’s empire is gone (to the detriment of civilization) and their homeland is a trainwreck. They won’t be able to hold the line unlike in WW2.
Uncle Sams Nephew on July 19, 2011 at 10:02 AM
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Ed Morrissey on July 19, 2011 at 2:14 PM
J.E. and commenters, thanks for all the info. Unfortunately, count on Obowmao will cave – we’re already involved in 4 wars and we “need” China to keep priming our deficit spending. The price for our countinued borrowing will be to let China have its way with the region and our allies will be told to submit – much as our so-called allies in the ME were thrown under the Arab Spring bus.
AH_C on July 19, 2011 at 10:48 AM