The Sino-American comedy of errors
By Spengler
Asia
Times online
Nov. 10, 2014
BEIJING - Everything in tragedy happens for
a reason, and the result always is sad; most things in comedy happen by accident
and the outcome typically is happy. Sino-American relations are not destined for
conflict, although that is possible. The misunderstandings that bedevil
relations between the world's two most powerful countries remain comedic rather
than tragic. That probably is as good as it gets, for no amount of explanation
will enable Chinese and Americans to make sense of each other.
Where the
Chinese are defensive and cautious, the Americans tend to perceive them as
aggressive; where the Chinese are expansive ambitious, the Americans ignore them
altogether. The United States is a Pacific power accustomed to
maritime
dominance.
To the extent that Americans focus on China's foreign policy, it is to express
alarm at China's territorial claims on small uninhabited islands also claimed by
Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines. Apart from some overheated and self-serving
rhetoric from a few Chinese military leaders, though, the contested islands are
of negligible importance in China's scale of priorities.
The issue may
be moot by this writing: last week, China and Japan released a "Principled
Agreement on Handling and Improving Bilateral Relations", following meetings
between Japan's national security adviser, Shotaro Yachi, and Chinese State
Councilor Yang Jiechi. The document promises to "establish crisis management
mechanisms to avoid contingencies" and to employ "dialogue and consultation".
Neither Japan nor China had any interest in a military confrontation in
the Pacific, although both sides employed the island disputes to play to their
own nationalist constituencies. The Principled Agreement sends a signal that the
Kabuki show had gone far enough.
A common American meme in response to
supposed Chinese expansionism in the Pacific projected an Indian-Japanese
military alliance to contain Chinese ambitions under US sponsorship. Although a
few Indian nationalists enthused over the idea, it was an empty gesture from the
outside. If India got into a scrap with China over disputed borders, for
example, just what would Japan do to help?
The newly-elected Indian
government under Narendra Modi never took the idea seriously. on the contrary,
after President Xi Jinping's recent state visit to India, Modi envisions Chinese
investment in urgently needed infrastructure. Economics trumps petty concerns
over borders in the mountainous wasteland that separates the world's two most
populous nations.
There also is a strategic dimension to the growing
sense of agreement between China and India. From India's vantage point, China's
support for Pakistan's army is a concern, but it cuts both ways. Pakistan
remains at perpetual risk of tipping over towards militant Islam, and the main
guarantor of its stability is the army. China wants to strengthen the army as a
bulwark against the Islamic radicals, who threaten China's Xinjiang province as
much as they do India, and that probably serves India's interests as well as any
Chinese policy might.
Chinese analysts are dumbfounded about the US
response to what they view as a sideshow in the South China Sea and only
tangentially concerned about India. They struggle to understand why a vastly
improved relationship with Russia has emerged in response to US blundering in
Ukraine.
As a matter of diplomatic principle, China does not like
separatists because it has its own separatists to contend with, starting with
the Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang province. Washington thought that the Maidan
Revolution in Kiev last year would take Crimea out of Russian control, and
Russia responded by annexing the peninsula containing its main warm-water naval
base.
When the West imposed sanctions on Russia in retaliation, Moscow
moved eastwards - an obvious response, and one that strongly impacts Western
power. Not only has Russia opened its gas reserve to China, but it has agreed to
supply China with its most sophisticated military technology, including the
formidable S-400 air defense system. Russia was reluctant to do so in the past
given Chinese efforts to reverse-engineer Russian systems, but the Ukraine
crisis changed that.
Western analysts, to be sure, now observe that the
new Russian-Chinese rapprochement might be a challenge for the West. The New
York Times devoted a front-page feature to the opinions of the usual suspects
among Soviet watchers in its November 9 edition.
This was obvious months
ago, and should have been obvious before the fact: the West merely threw B'rer
Putin into the briar patch to his east. Of all the miscalculations in Western
policy since World War II, this was perhaps the stupidest. The Chinese are left
to scratch their heads about their unanticipated good luck.
It is wrong
to speak of a Russian-Chinese alliance, to be sure, but there is a developing
Sino-Russian condominium in Asia. The energy and defense deals between Moscow
and Beijing are important in their own right, but they take on all the more
importance in the context of what might be the most ambitious economic project
in history: the New Silk Road. The Pacific holds little promise for China. Japan
and South Korea are mature economies, customers as well as competitors of China.
Expansion in the Pacific simply has nothing to offer China's economy.
What China wants is to be impregnable within its own borders: it will spend
generously to develop surface-to-ship missiles that can take out US aircraft
carriers, hunter-killer submarines, and air defense systems.
China's
prospects are to the west and south: energy and minerals in Central Asia, food
in Southeast Asia, warm-water ports on the Indian Ocean, a vast market, and
access to world markets beyond. The network of rail, pipelines and
telecommunications that China is building through the former Soviet republics
and through Russia itself will terminate at the Mediterranean and provide a
springboard for Chinese trade with Europe.
The whole Eurasian landmass
is likely to become a Chinese economic zone, especially now that Russia is more
amenable to Chinese terms. That the Americans would have helped bring this to
fruition by tilting at windmills in Ukraine baffles the Chinese, but they are
enjoying the result.
The economic impact of this is hard to fathom, but
it is likely to extend Chinese influence westwards on a scale that the West
simply hasn't begun to imagine. It is not at all clear whether China has a clear
idea of what the implications of the New Silk Road might be. The implosion of
America's geopolitical position has placed risks and opportunities at Beijing's
doorstep, to Beijing's great surprise.
A year ago, Chinese officials
privately reassured visitors that their country would "follow the lead of the
dominant superpower" in matters relating to Middle East security, including
Iran's attempts to acquire nuclear weapons. For the past several decades, China
has allowed the US to look out for the Persian Gulf while it increased its
dependency on Persian Gulf oil. By 2020, China expects to import 70% of its oil,
and most of that will come from the Gulf.
The Chinese view has changed
radically during the past few months, in part due to the collapse of the Syrian
and Iraqi states and the rise of Islamic State. It is hard to find a Chinese
specialist who still thinks that the US can stand surely for Persian Gulf
security. Opinion is divided between those who think that America is merely
incompetent and those who think that America deliberately wants to destabilize
the Persian Gulf.
Now that the US is approaching self-sufficiency in
energy resources, some senior Chinese analysts believe it wants to push the
region into chaos in order to hurt China. one prominent Chinese analyst pointed
out that Islamic State is led by Sunni officers trained by the United States
during the 2007-2008 "surge" as well as elements of Saddam Hussein's old army,
and that this explains why IS has displayed such military and organizational
competence.
The complaint is justified, to be sure: General David
Petraeus helped train the 100,000-strong "Sunni Awakening" to create a balance
of power against the Shi'ite majority regime that the US helped bring to power
in 2006. How, the Chinese ask, could the Bush administration and Petraeus have
been so stupid? To persuade the Chinese that they were indeed that stupid is a
daunting task.
China's attitude towards Washington has turned towards
open contempt. Writing of the mid-term elections, the official daily newspaper
Global Times intoned: "The lame-duck president will be further crippled ? he has
done an insipid job, offering nearly nothing to his supporters. US society has
grown tired of his banality."
But the decline of American influence in
the region from which China obtains most of its oil is not a happy event for
Beijing.
China did not anticipate the end of the free ride from the
Americans, and it isn't sure what to do next. It has tried to maintain a balance
among countries with whom it trades and who are hostile to each other. It has
sold a great deal of conventional weapons to Iran, for example, and some older,
less-sophisticated ballistic missiles.
But China has sold Saudi Arabia
its top-of-the-line intermediate range missiles, giving the Saudis a "formidable
deterrent capability" against Iran and other prospective adversaries. China
obtains more oil from Saudi Arabia than any other country, although its imports
from Iraq and Oman are growing faster. Because the latter two countries are
closer to Iran, China wants to strike a balance.
Chinese opinion is
divided about the implications of Iran acquiring nuclear weapons: some
strategists believe that the balance of nuclear power in the region will suffice
to prevent the use of such weapons, while others fear that a nuclear exchange in
the Gulf might stop the flow of oil and bring down China's economy. China has
joined the P-5 plus 1 negotiations (involving the UN Security Council permanent
five members plus Germany) on Iran's nuclear status, but has not offered a
policy independent of President Barack Obama's.
Meanwhile the rise of
Islamist extremism worries Beijing, as well it should. At least a hundred
Uyghurs reportedly are fighting with Islamic State, presumably in order to
acquire terrorist skills to bring back home to China. Chinese analysts have a
very low opinion of the Obama administration's approach to dealing with IS, but
do not have an alternative policy. This is an issue of growing importance.
Instability threatens the Silk Road project at several key notes.
China
has no sympathy whatever for what analysts there like to call "political Islam".
America's flirtation with the Muslim Brotherhood - both from the Obama
administration and from mainstream Republicans such as Senator John McCain -
strikes the Chinese as incompetence, or worse. But China has no capability to go
after the Islamists, except for a very limited deployment of marines off the
coast of Somalia.
China's policy-making is careful, conservative and
consensus-driven. Its overriding concern is its own economy. The pace of
transformation of the Middle East has surprised it, and it is trying to decide
what to do next.
Its pro forma policy is to join the Iran talks, and
offer to join the Quartet (the UN, the US, the European Union, and Russia) talks
on the Israel-Palestine issue, but neither of these initiatives has much to do
with its actual concerns.
What China will do in the future cannot be
predicted. But it seems inevitable that China's basic interests will lead it to
far greater involvement in the region, all the more so as the US withdraws.
Spengler is channeled by David P Goldman. He is Senior Fellow
at the London Center for Policy Research and the Wax Family Fellow at the Middle
East Forum. His book How Civilizations Die (and why Islam is Dying,
Too)was published by Regnery
Press in September 2011. A volume of his essays on culture, religion and
economics, It's Not the End of the World - It's Just the End of
You, also appeared that fall,
from Van Praag Press.
(Copyright 2014 Asia Times online (Holdings)
Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and
republishing.)
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