China’s ‘gunboat diplomacy’
>> Monday, July 23, 2012
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
China frigate leaves
shoal: Palace happy,” said a huge electronic billboard, which I saw on the way
to the Ninoy Aquino International Airport to catch a plane home last July 16,
2012.
The news of a grounded
guided missile Chinese frigate near Half Moon Shoal (Hasa-Hasa Shoal) in the
Spratly archipelago, 69 miles west of Palawan, raised the tension level between
the Philippines and China ever since the latter declared the entire West
Philippine Sea (South China Sea) an extension of her territorial continental
shelf in 2010. And China made it crystal clear that this vast body of
water — rich in oil and natural gas deposits — is a “core national interest,”
which in diplomatic parlance means “non-negotiable.”
***
And to make sure that everybody — including the
United States — knows that she is serious about her stand on the issue, China
is building a naval force that would make her the dominant sea power in
Asia-Pacific by 2020. And to let everybody know that she means business,
she acquired an old aircraft carrier from Russia and retrofitted it with
state-of-the-art technology and is now undergoing sea trials.
China is also building two humongous aircraft
carriers, which would give her the ability to “defend” her territorial waters
from anyone including the United States who recently announced that she would
shift 60% of her naval forces to Asia-Pacific by 2020.
With 11 existing aircraft carriers and a new one
— the super aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford — projected to be completed
within a few years and operational by 2020, that means that the U.S. could
deploy seven carrier battle groups to cover the entire Asia-Pacific region
including the geostrategic Indian Ocean.
***
In theory, if armed hostility broke out between
the United States and China, the former could block all the choke points along
the “String of Pearls” sea lines of communication that extends from Hong Kong
by way of the South China Sea (West Philippine Sea), through the strategic
Strait of Malacca across the Indian Ocean, and through the Strait of Hormuz to
Iran in the Persian Gulf; and to the Red Sea to Port Sudan where China imports
15% of her oil from West Africa.
And with long-term contracts to develop Iran’s
oil fields, China’s dependence on oil from that region makes it imperative that
she defends the “String of Pearls” at all costs.
To do so, China needs to develop
economic-military relationships with Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Burma,
Maldives, and Kenya. It is not then surprising that U.S. has been trying
to partner with India – Pakistan’s nemesis — to counter China’s growing
influence in the Indian Ocean.
***
Cognizant of her weak position vis-à-vis the
United States’ superior military power, China has to take full control of the
West Philippine Sea and jump-start a pre-emptive military initiative through
the use of “gunboat diplomacy” to force the South East Asian nations into
submission.
The recent failure of the 45th ASEAN Ministerial
Meeting to issue a joint communiqué is the result of China’s influence over
some of the 10 member-nations.
As Mao Zedong was fond of saying, “Power comes
from the barrel of a gun,” the current imbroglio in the West Philippine Sea is
a testament to Mao’s strong influence on China’s new generation of leaders who
embraced the capitalist-socialist economic system of the visionary Deng
Xiaoping.
However, with all the economic progress China
made during the post-Mao era, China’s new generation of leaders remain
steadfast in employing Mao’s “barrel of a gun” strategy. And make no mistake;
they are dedicated communists in every meaning of the word.
So, don’t expect them to deal with “democratic”
countries within the framework of the norms and conventions established by the
United Nations, which, ironically, China belongs to as one of only five
member-countries who have veto power in the world organization’s powerful Security
Council.
***
China’s intrusive and aggressive behavior during
the past two decades attests to her determination to annex the entire West
Philippine Sea and exercise total military and economic control over this
mineral-rich region.
It is interesting to note that in 1994, two
years after the Philippine Senate evicted American military bases from the
country; China started her “creeping invasion” of Philippine territory in the
disputed Spratly archipelago.
While the Philippine Navy was not patrolling the
area around the Panganiban (Mischief) Reef, 130 miles away from Palawan, due to
the monsoon season, Chinese troops occupied the reef and initially built
structures on stilt. But other than lodging diplomatic protests against
the incursion, the Philippine government couldn’t do much.
Today, the Panganiban Reef is fortified with
permanent buildings and naval guns. China also delineated a prohibited
area within 60 miles of the reef.
Last June, after more than two months of
standoff, Chinese gunboats effectively took de facto possession
of the Panatag Shoal when they prevented a Philippine Coast Guard vessel and
fishing boats from entering the lagoon inside the shoal.
Several weeks ago, China demanded that the
Philippine government dismantle an elementary school on Pagasa Island in the
Kalayaan group of islands in the Spratly archipelago.
Last July 4, the Philippines protested China’s
move that virtually placed the entire West Philippine Sea including the
Macclesfield Bank under the jurisdiction of a newly created city, Sansha.
Macclesfield Bank is strategically located east of the Paracel Islands.
It is also claimed by the Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam. Evidently,
China’s action seems to signal that she is increasingly solidifying her
position on all the disputed islands in the West Philippine Sea.
***
But what is strange with the latest incident in
Hasa-Hasa Shoal is that the Philippine government through Foreign Affairs
Secretary Albert del Rosario has decided not to file a diplomatic protest over
the incursion, saying that the incident was probably the result of an
accident.
But the question is: What is a Chinese warship —
the missile-firing frigate Dongguan — doing in Philippine
waters? Isn’t that a sovereignty issue that should be addressed before
China becomes more aggressive? Or, did the Philippine government –
knowing that it doesn’t have the capability to defend the country – decide that
appeasing the Chinese “bully” is the country’s antidote against further
incursion or – Heaven forbid! – invasion?
Indeed, just the mere display of warships and
gunboats inside Philippine territorial waters would be enough to coerce the
Philippine government to acquiesce to China’s territorial claims.
And the ultimate question is: Isn’t it time for
the Philippines to arm herself in anticipation of a potential armed conflict
with China? We have become too reliant and dependent on the
U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty, which in my opinion is good only on
paper.
Since the eviction of U.S. military bases from
our sacred soil, do we expect Uncle Sam to come to our aid at our beck and
call? Unless, of course, we’d open our doors and welcome the U.S.
military forces back.
But at the end of the day, if there is someone
to defend our country, nobody could defend us better than ourselves. If
we can’t, history tells us that we would soon cease to exist as a nation.(PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
1 comments:
and now ladies and gentlemen, chinese is having now a mayor and other officials elected for our supposedly karburo sea and pinas is having new positions for the pinas military and for what? poor, poor, helpless, helpless pilipinas. only good for blahblah and corrupt government.
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