In March 2015, Chinese
warships evacuated 629 Chinese citizens and 279 other foreign nationals from
Yemen. This was a historic move for the Chinese navy and one of the first times
that China had also rescued other foreign nationals. It demonstrated China’s
growing capacity to protect its nationals abroad. China’s leading delegate to
the 2015 Shangri-La dialogue, Admiral Sun Jianguo highlighted the Yemen
evacuation as a reflection of China’s willingness to help others through
military means. The recently released defence white paper, China’s Military
Strategy, lists the ‘China’s overseas interests’ as a priority of the
country’s national security policy.
Over the past decade, China
has fundamentally changed its policy towards protecting nationals abroad and
now systematically intervenes to help nationals in trouble spots. The ongoing
evolution of this policy will have far-reaching consequences for the role of
China as an international security actor. In 2011, China rescued more than
47,000 Chinese abroad — more in a single year than in the decades since the
1949 revolution. More than 35,000 of these were Chinese workers from Libya.
China faces a new global
risk map. Chinese companies as well as workers and tourists are all over the globe.
China is already in the top tier of foreign investors. Chinese companies are in
hot pursuit of oil and natural resources abroad, particularly in Africa.
Estimates put the number of Chinese nationals overseas at more than 5 million,
including up to 2 million in Africa. China has left few regions of the world
unexplored and is now promoting the construction of a ‘New Silk Road’, which will
undoubtedly herald security challenges. Pakistan has already announced it is
establishing a special military unit to protect Chinese workers that are due to
arrive to build infrastructure for the economic corridor linking China and
Pakistan.
There is now a tension in
Chinese policy between the risk-averse Chinese government, which emphasises
non-interference, and the interests of risk-prone state-owned enterprises
(SOEs) and their large numbers of workers. In Angola, the number of Chinese is
approximately 200,000. There are now several countries that — in terms of the
number of Chinese citizens there — are ‘too big to fail’. This means that the
business-oriented ‘go out’ strategy now has to be squared with broader
strategic calculations. But how will this impact Chinese foreign policy?
In Pakistan and Afghanistan
concerns about Chinese nationals abroad has led the Chinese government to
engage beyond the government, normally the privileged interlocutor, but also
with the Taliban and other extremist groups in Pakistan. On the Mekong River,
China has become the local river cop, fielding law enforcement patrols
following the killings of 13 Chinese sailors in 2011. China even considered
employing a drone attack beyond its borders to kill the alleged culprit, a
local Burmese drug lord.
Nowhere is China’s new
approach more evident than in North and South Sudan. Chinese SOEs ventured
exclusively for oil in pre-partition Sudan, but China was subsequently faced
with attacks on its citizens and unwanted foreign-policy conundrums such as
South Sudanese independence. China’s commercial and human presence in Sudan
gradually led to a more proactive Chinese approach to securing national
interests. Recently, China dispatched a combat battalion under a UN
peacekeeping umbrella to South Sudan. China also secured the inclusion of a
clause to protect foreign oil workers — most of whom are Chinese — in the
mandate of the UN Mission in South Sudan.
The protection of nationals
overseas will be a major driver of foreign policy change into the future, and
it will continue to shape China’s approach to international intervention and
power projection. As Chinese commercial interests and human presence abroad
expands, the Chinese state apparatus is forced to follow suit. Studying China’s
new risk map offers indications of how China may continue to behave on its path
to great power status.
Beijing gradually accepted a
responsibility to defend China’s nationals overseas. The acceptance of this
responsibility came not as part of a great power strategy but through China’s
commercial presence in weak and fragile states. The question of political risk
and stability abroad has been thrust upon a China that prefers to shun
involvement in international crises and the domestic politics of other nations.
China is more likely to lend
stronger support for multilateral interventions if its own interests are at
stake. If, for example, Angola — with its more than 200,000 Chinese nationals,
huge Chinese investments and loans — were to face internal strife, China could
suddenly be a key permanent member of the UN Security Council clamouring for an
international response. The magnetic pull of these interests will define
Chinese foreign policy in coming years.
Jonas Parello-Plesner is a
diplomat and scholar, currently with the Danish Embassy in Washington DC. He
previously worked for the European Council on Foreign Relations. The views
expressed in this article are his own.
Dr Mathieu Duchâtel is
Senior Researcher at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and
SIPRI’s representative in Beijing since 2011.
Jonas Parello-Plesner and Dr
Mathieu Duchâtel are co-authors of the 2015 book China’s Strong Arm: Protecting Citizens and Assets Abroad.
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