China is already a great power, and is on the way to becoming an even greater one. For 125 nations including Australia, China is already their biggest trading partner.
Its wealth
is translating into military might, too. In its annual military parade though
Beijing in September, China proudly displayed its potentially game-changing new
missile for the first time.
The
so-called "carrier killer", with its claimed ability to strike US
aircraft carriers at a range of up to 1550km, was clearly painted
"DF21-D" on its side – in English lettering, just to make sure the
world noticed.
The unresolved
question, though, is how this increasingly powerful China will behave toward
its neighbours. Will it use peaceful methods to solve disagreements? Or will it
be prepared to use force to get its way? This was the big question posed to a
group of senior Chinese delegates last Friday behind closed doors in a room on
Sydney Harbour. The responses were not all reassuring.
The good
news is that the 18 Chinese delegates to the annual Australia-China High-Level
Dialogue were very upbeat on relations with Australia. And there was general
rhetorical support for peaceful approaches to settling disputes.
The bad news
is that they kept alive the option of the use of force to settle the most
sensitive neighbourhood disputes, the ones that China designates "core
interests". It was a disturbing signal to an anxious region. The
"core interests" long included Taiwan and Tibet. In 2010 Beijing
added to the list the South China Sea, where China's claims overlap with those
of five other countries.
Beijing
considers its "core interests" to be non-negotiable red lines where
it has always kept open the option of armed force to protect its claims.
In the
dialogue last week, a Chinese representative compared Beijing's claims in the
South China Sea to Australia's claim to the city of Darwin. In other words,
automatic and indisputable. The differences, of course, are that Darwin
is on the Australian mainland, and that no other nation lays claim to it.
The shipping
lanes through the South China Sea constitute the world's most valuable trading
route. They hold a vital interest for Australia – some two-thirds of Australian
exports travel through the sea.
The dialogue
is a government-run event that brings together officials of both
countries as well as business chiefs, cultural leaders, academics and
journalists. Of the 18 Chinese, six were current or former officials of
ambassador rank or above.
I was one of
the journalists from the Australia side, and the Chatham House rule applies; I
am permitted to tell you what was said in the meeting, but not to identify who
said it.
Both
countries were upbeat in their assessments of bilateral relations. It was,
indeed, a year of major developments. The China-Australia free trade agreement
has been signed and is due to take effect next month. This year has also seen
the first joint naval exercises between the two countries. It was a year of
"an unprecedented level of co-operation", said a Chinese participant,
and surely he is right.
An
Australian speaker set out clearly the big question that every capital in the
region is asking about China and the future of the Asia-Pacific:
"What kind of strategic culture is the lodestone for the future –
will it be based on international law and norms, or the rule of power?"
It was, he
said, the fundamental question for all, and the South China Sea was a test
case.
"The
perception of China's peaceful rise has been put into question" by its
land reclamations and militarisation of atolls and islands in the South China
Sea. The consequences of mismanagement of these disputes could be
"profound", he said.
He, like
another Australian speaker, urged that China demonstrate its goodwill towards
its neighbours by concluding a code of conduct with the countries 10 of ASEAN.
This group includes all the rival claimants to the South China Sea except for
Taiwan.
China and
ASEAN declared their intent to agree to such a code in 2002. But since then
little has happened. Beijing has refused to negotiate with ASEAN as a bloc. It
insists on negotiations with each of the ASEAN countries separately. This, of
course, gives China preponderance in each one-on-one.
With
negotiations going nowhere, China has moved to change the facts on the ground
with its island-building program, defying its neighbours to stop it.
But the
Chinese response to this suggestion was one of nationalistic indignation. A
Chinese delegate said that Vietnam and the Philippines were the first to assert
unilateral claims to islands in the South China Sea. Vietnam illegally occupies
29 islands and the Philippines 14, he said, while China has occupied seven.
"Unilateral assertion was begun not by China but by other claimants."
He was
backed up by another Chinese delegate who said that China was the country which
had paid a toll in the South China Sea, suffering from the illegal actions of
others. Implicitly, it was now China's turn to assert itself as it wished.
An
Australian asked the Chinese to return to the question of principles that should
apply – did China support unilateral assertion, or peaceful negotiation?
And if Beijing supported unilateral assertion, how did it expect the
other countries of the region to respond? The answer brought more heat than
light.
If China's
answer is that the region's future is to be decided by "the rule of
power", other countries will continue to respond as they have begun
– by continuing a military build-up as they seek to strengthen their
bargaining positions for a future decided by brute force.
Peter
Hartcher is international editor Sydney Morning Herald Illustration:
John Shakespeare
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