China’s position, policy and practices in the South China Sea have become counterproductive to its attempts to enhance its soft power and relations with Southeast Asia. Nevertheless it continues them and has even doubled down on its historic claim – which was rejected by an international arbitration panel – to much of the Sea by enforcing it with its maritime militia, coast guard and occasionally even its navy.
China’s rival claimants – Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam – are pushing back with their own enhanced military presence, upgrades and collaboration with the US and other outside powers. This increasing militarization of the South China Sea disputes sets the stage for the worst-case scenario: frequent and widespread conflict that eventually results in a military confrontation between China and the US.
China has been trying to build up its soft power in the region. It has stepped up its economic and diplomatic efforts via its Belt and Road Initiative to persuade its rival South China Sea claimants to compromise and recognize its interests and concerns. It is proposing an “inclusive” Indo-Pacific as an alternative to the United States’ Free and Open Indo-Pacific vision that excludes China.
Its new Foreign Minister Qin Gang has renewed diplomatic efforts to broaden and deepen engagement with Southeast Asian nations including its rival claimants and pledged to “keep the South China Sea peaceful and stable.”
Now it has also proposed an overarching grand Global Security Initiative (GSI) that includes a promise “to conduct bilateral and multilateral security operation with all countries and regional organizations.”
As a counter to what it sees as US-led cabals against it, Beijing may even try to build its own economic and security grouping in the region beginning with China-leaning Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar. It could try to persuade Thailand to join it and Vietnam at least to remain neutral.
But if these soft-power efforts do not persuade its rivals to compromise on their claims, it may well decide to do whatever it takes to achieve its interests in the South China Sea. This would be a realization of the ancient Thucydian proverb that “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.”
Indeed, it could well mean a heavy-handed use of its military “stick” and its economic might to reward and punish “uncooperative” rival claimants.
In this scenario, China would generate widespread opprobrium and rival claimants would likely move even closer to the US. But China may calculate that it can weather the ensuing political storm.
It knows that it holds long-term advantages over the US as well as its rival claimants. It is a permanent fixture in the region – it will always be there – and its economic and military might are rapidly and inexorably expanding.
Indeed, it may assume that there is really very little the rival claimants can do but whine, wail, and plead with the US to back them up militarily. China may calculate that that is unlikely because, notwithstanding US rhetoric, no core US security interests are directly threatened and that the US public and Congress will not support another potentially disastrous foreign adventure in defense of vague concepts like the “international order.”
Moreover, if China feels sufficiently threatened it may counter US initiatives to surround and contain it by implementing America’s worst nightmare – drawing closer to Russia militarily.
Yes this is a worst-case scenario. But it is a realistic alternative response to the disputes that China may find increasingly attractive as its rival claimants’ positions harden and the US becomes ever more deeply involved. The US and China’s rival claimants should at least consider the possibility that the “chickens” of their anti-China policies and actions will come home to roost.
Of course China’s rival claimants – and the US – want to avoid this worst-case scenario. But to do so they will have to compromise and address some of China’s concerns and interests. Perhaps the best that can be accomplished is to negotiate a series of “deals.”
For the US, this would include agreement to back off on its enhanced diplomatic embrace and military support for Taiwan. For China’s rival claimants in the South China Sea, that means reaching a modus vivendi with China.
Perhaps the best they can hope for is arrangements in which China maintains its historic claim to placate its nationalists but does not enforce it. This could include China’s priority access, under rival claimants’ management, to a share of what they consider their fish and petroleum resources.
This might be in exchange for China’s restraint from intimidating its rivals and providing its forefront technological and capital assistance in harvesting next-generation methane-hydrate resources on their continental slopes.
This scenario is not about “right and wrong.” Rather, it is about relative power. The reality is that China, its rival claimants and the US have to compromise. No compromise means an end point of China’s absolute hegemony over the South China Sea or a universally catastrophic conflict.
Political and military analysts should realize this and advise accordingly. However, if they have realistic alternatives short of risking war that do not include the forlorn hope that China will back off its claims, I and the region are all ears.
An edited version of this piece appeared in the South China Morning Post.