A Three-Pronged Approach to the ADIZ
In responding to the ADIZ, the U.S. needs to
consider carefully its position on China as a rising power.
Practically all of the scores of articles that have been
published since China announced its new Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) have
focused on China’s moves and on how the United States and its allies – Japan in
particular – have responded and should respond. Analysts have examined China’s
motives, seeking to determine whether the ADIZ is defensive, meant to protect
China’s sovereignty and security; offensive, meant to prepare for a land
grab; a reaction meant to indicate displeasure with Japan’s recent threat to shoot down unmanned aircraft in
Japanese airspace; or meant to test U.S. resolve now that it has come to be
viewed as having allowed other nations to cross one red line after another.
Analysts of the U.S. response have noted signs of weakness in Washington’s
instructions that civilian airlines should abide by China’s new rules, and they
fear that accidental clashes between U.S. military planes engaged in
overflights and the Chinese fighters that shadow them may lead to a shoot-out.
Still other articles examined the side effects of China’s ADIZ on Japan, which was
moving away from its pacifist orientation even before this recent development.
All of these rightful concerns deal with the immediate
situation. The time has now come to also explore how to address the
underlying conflict on two levels: that of the status of the Senkaku/Diaoyu
Islands and that of China’s rising power and regional role. Unless this is
done, the U.S. is limiting itself to dealing with symptoms while ignoring the
underlying lingering tensions.
I take it for granted that the U.S. and its allies cannot
simply acquiesce and allow China to unilaterally change the status of the
Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands and their surrounding waters. True, declaring an ADIZ is
a limited step, but it is fairly viewed as part of the “salami tactics” that –
if permitted to continue – would likely lead to Chinese control of the
Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands and the nearby waters and resources. However, it is not
enough to counter China’s most recent maneuver, only to return to the status
quo ante of unsettled conflict over the status of the islands and their
surrounding seas.
Several suggestions have been made as to what might next be
done. Some hold that dispute could be submitted to a review by the
International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea or the International Court of
Justice. Such a review has been suggested by Professor Jerome Cohen, an
internationally renowned China law scholar at New York University. The review
is likely to take several years and, during that time, all parties involved
would have strong incentives to engage in serious negotiations before a
decision is reached.
Another approach calls for a joint administration of
resources in and around the islands could be established and the issue of
sovereignty shelved. In effect, informal proposals in the 1970s for the joint
development of oil and gas resources in the disputed areas were made by
Japanese and Chinese officials in the past, but never implemented. An agreement between China
and Japan to jointly develop gas fields in the East China Sea
was signed in 2008, but has yet to be carried out. Alternatively, sovereignty
over the territory could be awarded to one state, but resource-related rights
could be assigned to all claimants. Both of these recommendations have been put
forward by the Carter Center.
Still others have suggested that the two states could
consider the formation of a supranational organization that would be authorized
to exploit and manage resources in the disputed areas. Japan and China’s
conflicting claims to territorial sovereignty would be effectively overridden
by a supranational governing body similar to the European Coal and Steel
Community – an idea advanced by former Japanese ambassador to Iran and Iraq, Magosaki Ukeru.
Arguably even more important is the resolution of other such
remaining territorial disputes, especially the one concerning the Philippines.
I write “remaining” because many such conflicts have already been worked out with
China, a point that is often overlooked by a media that focuses on the drama of
confrontation rather than on low-key, slow, grinding conflict resolution
processes. As M. Taylor Fravel points out, “Since 1949, China has settled
seventeen of its twenty-three territorial disputes. Moreover, it has offered
substantial compromises in most of these settlements, usually receiving less
than 50 percent of the contested land.” More recently, China and India signed
the Border Defense Cooperation Agreement on October 23, as a significant step
toward resolving their territorial differences.
China’s dispute with the Philippines is particularly
important to settle for two reasons. First, while the U.S. commitment to Japan,
the contested islands included, is enshrined in a treaty and widely recognized,
its commitment to defending the Philippines is much less clearly delineated.
Second, the Philippines has made its own provocative moves – for instance when,
as part of its ongoing dispute with China over the Scarborough Shoal, it detained eight Chinese fishing vessels in the
surrounding waters in April 2012. Hence, the risk that misunderstandings will
occur between China and the Philippines and that the U.S. will become involved
in a conflict it does not seek – or that the Philippines will find itself
unexpectedly unsupported in such a conflict – is particularly high.
Beyond the specific disputes lies a more general question
that the U.S. has not yet adequately addressed. What is the U.S. position
toward China’s rising power? Will the U.S. go so far as to allow China its own
version of the Monroe Doctrine, as some have suggested? Or will it allow China
to expand as long as this expansion is limited to economic and cultural means
but does not involve use of force? Follow a new strategy of mutually assured restraint? Or, will the U.S.
insist on opposing any and all changes to the status quo – including existing
rules governing maritime navigation, territorial claims, and so forth? In other
words, will it follow the course taken by many other established powers that
did not yield a quarter to rising powers and fell into what is has been called
the Thucydides Trap, leading to a new world war?
Amitai Etzioni is a university professor and professor of
international relations at The George Washington University. He served as
a senior adviser to the Carter White House and taught at Columbia University,
Harvard University, and the University of California at Berkeley. His latest
book is Hot Spots: American Foreign Policy in a Post-Human-Rights
World.
No comments:
Post a Comment