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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Time to speak up about the South China Sea
14 March 2019
Author: Lyle J Morris, RAND Corporation
There
appears to be a collective aversion among government officials and
heads-of-state in Southeast Asia to speak up in public about Chinese
transgressions and coercion in the South China Sea. Such reticence is
based on misplaced fear of Chinese repercussions and does a disservice
to regional interests, undermines deterrence and
needlessly concedes leverage in negotiations with China on territorial
disputes or a South China Sea Code of Conduct.
This sentiment was on display in a recent interview with
Singapore’s Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen, who downplayed concerns over
Chinese activities in the disputed waters. Ng said calling China a
regional hegemon was a matter of ‘opinion’, gave credence to China’s
‘peaceful rise’ narrative and highlighted China’s positive role in
economics and trade. All were unprompted comments made in the context of
discussing the South China Sea disputes.
Other leaders in Southeast Asia, such as Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, have also made accommodating statements that
seem to downplay China’s actions in the South China Sea. ASEAN chairman
statements are noteworthy for their relatively benign rhetoric and
failure to include terms such as ‘erosion of trust’ or ‘militarisation’
of the South China Sea due to Chinese actions. In some cases, China has successfully lobbied the bloc to remove such language.
Directly opposing Chinese coercion in the South China Sea is
antithetical to some leaders in Southeast Asia who may fear that new or
enhanced postures could antagonise China, the region’s largest trading
partner. But directly calling out China’s breaks from the status quo or
intimidation tactics may not necessarily put these countries at risk of
Chinese countermeasures. Words, and their cognitive effect in the region
and in Beijing, could be used to greater effect as an important tool to
push back against Chinese coercion.
To be clear, words alone will not solve the territorial disputes with
China. But they could signal the principles that countries stand for and
the concerns that they hold. They could set the tone for negotiations,
enhance morale and communicate resolve. Words also matter a great deal
to China. One needn’t look further than the sensitivity with which China
regards ASEAN chairman statements on the South China Sea as an example.
There is only one country undermining stability in the South China Sea:
China. It has reclaimed over 3000 acres of land — far more than any
other claimant — on its occupied features in the Paracel and Spratly
islands. It has built military facilities on its claimed islands that
support the forward deployment of air, naval and land-based assets, and
deployed missiles on them.
China increasingly uses both government and non-government assets to deny other nations’ legitimate use of resources in their exclusive economic zones in the South China Sea. It called an international legal ruling on its maritime claims illegitimate and a piece of ‘waste paper’. And it engages in unsafe and unprofessional behaviour when coming into contact with aircraft and naval vessels of the United States and other nations.
Most of these activities constitute clear breaks of international law
and violations of the consensus in the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct
of Parties in the South China Sea between ASEAN and China.
China’s actions in the South China Sea are not disputed by officials and
academics in the region. Highlighting these facts should not be
controversial. Yet leaders in almost every country in Southeast Asia
seem to be meeting China’s strategy of changing the status quo through
coercion with quiet accommodation. While this may be because leaders
fear potential consequences from China, such fears are overblown.
What is needed is a cognitive shift in how officials in Southeast Asia
approach the public signalling of the China problem in the South China
Sea. Southeast Asian leaders should consider dropping the notion that
speaking up publicly about Chinese activities that threaten and
undermine basic norms of peace and stability will harm their relations
in the region or with China.
Countries in the region should cease viewing the South China Sea
disputes as a binary choice between war with China and accommodating
Chinese activities, as Ng and others have
suggested. Calling out Chinese transgressions is unlikely to lead to
war. To the contrary, it could incrementally bolster morale and possibly
prompt other leaders to feel less insecure about speaking up
themselves.
Lyle J Morris is a senior policy analyst at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation.