By Erick San Juan
Beijing on Friday—the 13th no less—threatened the United States with
“large-scale war.”
“Prepare for a military clash,” said the Global Times in an editorial.
Beijing was hitting back hard against remarks made by Rex Tillerson,
Donald Trump’s pick for secretary of State, in his confirmation hearing. “We’re
going to have to send China a clear signal that, first, the island-building
stops and, second, your access to those islands is also not going to be
allowed,” he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Wednesday (January
11).
The nominee also said China’s militarizing the islands is “akin to
Russia’s taking of Crimea.”
Observers gasped at Tillerson’s words, which signaled a radical change
in American policy toward China. Yet his general approach toward Beijing,
despite all the criticism he has attracted in the last few days, is the correct
one for these times.” (Source: The Daily Beast, Gordon G. Chang 1.16.2017)
Is it really the right approach towards China’s claim in the South China
Sea, confrontational rather than diplomacy?
Analysts said Tillerson’s testimony, combined with his future boss’s
earlier pronouncements, signaled that a Trump administration is poised to take
a much tougher stance on China.
Since winning the election, Trump has lashed out at China on Twitter,
made clear he’s serious about wringing a new trade deal from Beijing and
upended US policy toward Taiwan — an issue of deep sensitivity for China.
“All the quotes taken together do signal that, like Trump and some of
his advisers, are poised to take much firmer stance on China in the South China
Sea and across the board,” said Ashley Townshend, a research fellow, at the
United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney.
But Townshend doubted whether Tillerson would really follow through on
some of the specifics of his testimony.
“The US cannot block China’s access to the islands without causing a
confrontation, probably a military confrontation, and it would be illegal for
the US to block access to the vast majority of those islands and reefs,” he
said. (Source: Tillerson sets stage for showdown with Beijing over South China
Sea by Katie Hunt, CNN, 1.13.17)
Most likely a regional conflict will erupt once US under Trump regime
will implement such blockade to stop China’s access to the reclaimed islands in
the SCS. And what will be the stand of our country if ever a confrontation will
occur?
RP must avoid the prospect of entanglement. A sound advice from
businessman Manny Lopez in his analysis – A geopolitical scenario wherein an
ultimatum from the US and its allies to stop the development and militarization
of artificial islands in SCS being rejected by China is highly probable.
Initially, a limited Air-Sea battle between the dominant and rising power to
test their resolve will happen either by accident or localized decision, unless
reason and skillful diplomacy prevails pre-emptively. The Republic of the
Philippines must avoid entanglements in the superpower conflict by
intelligently pursuing an independent and neutral foreign policy. We must not
allow our shores to become the staging ground of the war effort by either side.
However, we must continue to positively engage both superpowers and offer
win-win solutions to help resolve the upcoming conflict and save ourselves.
China’s expected refusal to dismantle its air-defense and anti-ship
missile systems deployed in the 7 artificial islands in SCS could be a
compelling reason for the US Navy to attack using submarine-launched Harpoons
and ship-borne Tomahawk cruise missiles to eliminate the said installations
from a safe distance. Freedom of navigation in the South China Sea is perceived
to be crucial to ensure unhampered trade in the busy shipping route, where more
than US$ 5-Trillion worth of goods transits each year. At least a couple of US
carrier battle groups supported by Japanese, Australian and South Korean navies
will likely be deployed in the area to effect control of the sea lanes. How the
Russian and Indian Navies will play their role in the inevitable conflict is
yet to be determined.”
As an observer of events as they unfold, we have been writing (and
speaking in our daily radio broadcast) that we must not allow the use of our
territories as the battleground for another conflict in the region and much
more – not to drag our country and people to an unnecessary war in the process.
With the new leadership in the US, we are in for some surprising times.
Finally, the administration that will threaten the “great wall of sand” in the
SCS and might give Xi some second thoughts of changing his foreign policy was
leaked by the Bloomberg News tuesday January 24,2017 and published by
Business Mirror.
“Confronted by the challenge of a Donald J. Trump led White House, China
is signaling it’s ready to work with the new administration and has already
taken a handful of policy steps that may help fend off criticism over access to
its markets.”
But it’s not all olive branch, Xinhua news article congratulating Trump
also laid out the areas China regards as off limits. It said, “China’s resolve
to safeguard it’s defining interests in Taiwan and the South China Sea islands
has always been strong.”
Xi allegedly has a strong domestic imperative not to appear weak before
a twice a decade Communist party congress when several top leaders are due to
be replaced except himself?
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