woensdag 4 november 2015
US ramps up pressure on Beijing over South China Sea
Guided-missile
destroyer USS Lassen
(U.S.
Navy photo by Information Systems Technician 1st Class Benjamin
Wooldridge/Released)
By
Peter Symonds
Following
its provocative naval intervention last week against Chinese
territorial claims in the South China Sea, the Obama administration
is engaged in an aggressive diplomatic offensive throughout Asia,
seeking to ramp up the pressure on China over the explosive issue.
Admiral
Harry Harris, commander of the US Pacific Command, deliberately
inflamed tensions yesterday during his trip to Beijing. He
emphatically declared that the US military would “continue to fly,
sail and operate whenever and wherever international law allows. The
South China Sea is not—and will not—be an exception.”
For
months Harris pressed for President Obama to give the green light for
“freedom of navigation” operations within the 12-nautical mile
territorial limit surrounding Chinese-controlled reefs. In March, the
admiral implied that China’s land reclamation activities in the
region posed a threat, describing it as creating “a great wall of
sand.”
On
October 27, the USS Lassen, a guided missile destroyer, intruded
within the 12-mile limit surrounding at least one of the
Chinese-administered islets in the Spratly Islands. It was the first
such direct challenge to Beijing’s claims. Washington insists that
under international law several of China’s reefs, before land
reclamation, were submerged at high tide and therefore do not
generate territorial waters. Significantly, however, the US has not
ratified the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea that is the basis
for this assertion.
Harris
declared yesterday that the USS Lassen was simply engaged in a
routine operation. “We’ve been conducting freedom of navigation
operations all over the world for decades, so no one should be
surprised by them,” he said.
In
reality, the deliberate violation of Chinese claims has nothing to do
with upholding international laws and norms. Rather it is a component
of the Obama administration’s broader “pivot to Asia”—an
all-encompassing diplomatic, economic and military strategy aimed at
isolating China and subordinating it to US interests, by war if
necessary.
Chinese
officials rebuked Harris for his comments in Beijing. The People’s
Liberation Army chief of general staff Fang Fenghui accused him of
creating “a disharmonious atmosphere for our meeting.” Foreign
ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying accused the US of “hypocrisy and
hegemonism” for demanding that Beijing stop militarising the South
China Sea, while sending warships into the region.
Harris
attempted to play down the danger of conflict between the two
nuclear-armed powers, saying: “Some pundits predict a coming clash
between our nations. I do not ascribe to this pessimistic view.”
This
remark, which implies that Washington expects Beijing to back down in
the face of repeated provocations, actually highlights the dangers of
conflict. China cannot relent indefinitely in such a strategically
sensitive area. China’s Defence Minister Chang Wanquan warned his
US counterpart Ashton Carter yesterday in Malaysia there was a
“bottom line” for China in regard to US actions in the South
China Sea.
An
unnamed US defence official told Reuters yesterday that the Pentagon
intended to repeat last week’s naval intrusion “about twice a
quarter or a little more than that.” He said such a schedule would
“make it regular but not a constant poke in the eye.”
Nevertheless that is exactly what the US actions constitute—a
constant humiliation that could goad China into responding.
US
Defence Secretary Carter is in Kuala Lumpur to attend this week’s
biennial meeting of Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
defence ministers. In another deliberate affront to China, the US and
Japan are both pressing for the South China Sea to be placed on the
meeting’s agenda and included in the concluding statement.
Carter
has been in Asia to marshal support for the US campaign. Before
flying to Malaysia, he visited South Korea where Defence Minister Han
Min-koo parroted the line from Washington, declaring that “it is
our stance that freedom of navigation and freedom of flight should be
ensured in this region.” Pointing to the pressure from Washington,
John Delury, an associate professor at Yonsei University, told the
Wall Street Journal:
“The Americans are trying to get the Koreans to carry water on
issues that are farther afield.”
Malaysian
Defence Minister Hishammuddin Hussein made no reference to the South
China Sea in opening the ASEAN defence ministers’ meeting, but
cautiously indicated some support for the US in a separate news
conference. He said countries with a stake in the region should
exercise their right to operate in “international waters.” He
nevertheless ruled out any discussion of the issue, saying that it
came under the purview of foreign, rather than defence, ministers.
Hishammuddin’s
comments point to the nervousness among ASEAN members over the
heightened tensions. While the Philippines and Vietnam fully support
Washington’s aggressive stance, others such as Malaysia are
concerned about the impact on their economic relations with China.
Japan,
which is backing the US, is also exploiting the issue to establish
its own relations in South East Asia. It delivered two more patrol
boats to Vietnam yesterday as part of an agreement last year to boost
the country’s coast guard to counter China. Tokyo recently reached
a similar arrangement with the Philippines, which is aggressively
pursuing its territorial disputes with China.
Washington’s
deliberate inflaming of flashpoints in the South China Sea is not
only aimed at China but cuts across the efforts of its European
rivals to establish closer relations with Beijing. The visits by
Carter and Admiral Harris to Asia followed Chinese President Xi
Jinping’s trip to Britain where he was royally feted and sealed
major economic agreements between the two countries. The Dutch king
Willem-Alexander, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French
President Francois Hollande each visited Beijing over the past two
weeks accompanied by corporate entourages.
None
of this will have gone unnoticed in the US, which reacted bitterly
earlier this year when Britain signed up to China’s Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank, despite US objections. Unable to
secure its world domination by economic means, the US is increasingly
resorting to risky military measures to undermine its rivals or
potential rivals and disrupt their relations, heightening the dangers
of war.
This
article first appeared on World
Socialist Web Site (WSWS)
on
4
November
2015,
and was republished with permission.
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