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The China question
The UKâs premier security think tank warned that, while the world focuses on the fight against international terrorism and the Middle East, China is rapidly expanding its influence from Asia to Africa. The âpearlsâ in Africa include Sudan, Angola, Algeria, Gabon, Namibia, Zambia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Djibouti, Mali, Central Africa, Liberia, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, and the Democratic Republic of Congo
President George W Bushâs recent visit to Asia made little news â by design. But thatâs because Mr Bush didnât begin to address the issue that is looming ever larger in the region: the changing face of security in Asia in view of Chinaâs growing economic and military might.
This summer, for example, China and Russia conducted their first-ever grand-scale joint military exercises. This was followed by Russian news reports that China, Russia, and India would conduct trilateral military exercises, named âIndira 2005â on the same scale before the end of this year.
In the past, such a combination of countries was almost unthinkable, and these exercises cannot be explained away as simple âone-offâ affairs with little resonance. Instead, they reflect Chinaâs long-term strategic goal of establishing hegemony across Asia.
One tool of this ambition is the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), under which the Sino-Russian exercises took place. Established in June 2001, the SCO includes China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. The SCOâs original purpose was to mitigate tensions on the borders of China and the Central Asian countries after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the arrival of the United States military with the war in Afghanistan.
China regards the SCO as a stage for broadening its influence over a vast region, ranging from the Asia-Pacific to Southwest Asia, the Middle East, East Africa, and the Indian Ocean. Indeed, its members include about 45 percent of the worldâs population, and 28 percent of the landmass ranging across the Eurasian continent.
Chinaâs active leadership of the SCO has resulted in policies that it favours. Gradually, the SCO shifted its focus to fighting Islamic radicals. Nowadays, however, the SCO is often used as a forum to campaign against supposed American unilateralism and to provide a united front â especially between China and Russia â against the US with respect to security and arms-reduction issues in the region. This includes joint anti-terror training and demands to reduce US forces in the region, particularly from Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
The SCO provides China not only with a platform to confront the existing US-led alliance in the Asia-Pacific region, but is increasingly being used to prevent the formation of a US-led network to restrain Chinaâs advance. Ultimately, it is feared that the SCO could develop into a military alliance similar to the Warsaw Pact of the Cold War era, with an embryonic âGreat China Unionâ at its core.
But Chinaâs regional diplomacy goes far beyond the SCO. It seizes every opportunity that comes its way, including the Six Party Talks on North Koreaâs nuclear ambitions, to emphasise its centrality to the settlement of any and all Asian issues. Moreover, it continues to build its âstring of pearlsâ of military bases at every key point on maritime transportation routes along the âarc of instabilityâ from the Middle East to Chinaâs coast.
The âpearlsâ in Africa include Sudan, Angola, Algeria, Gabon, Namibia, Zambia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Djibouti, Mali, Central Africa, Liberia, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In each country, China is nurturing special military and commercial relations intended to promote loyalty to Chinese interests.
Similarly, many African states now seem to be leaning heavily towards China in its dispute with Taiwan. When Japanâs government tried to become a permanent member of the UN Security Council, few African countries backed its bid, despite receiving economic aid for decades.
China likes to boast of its âpeaceful riseâ. But the rise of Bismarckâs Germany at the end of the nineteenth century was also peaceful â for a while. The question is not whether China rises to great-power status peacefully, but whether it intends to remain peaceful when it gets there. Just as the world confronted the âGerman Questionâ 125 years ago, it is now confronting the âChina Questionâ. We need a better answer this time.
Hideaki Kaneda, retired vice admiral of Japanâs Self-Defence Forces, is currently director of the Okazaki Institute
Posted by: john 2005-12-12 |
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=137233 |
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