Donald Trump: 'More
than waterboarding'
Asia has
serious strategic problems. It needs serious strategic solutions. Instead, on
the weekend it got the thoughts, if that's what you can call them, of Donald
Trump.
The region is focused intently on
China's behaviour as it makes increasingly brazen assaults on the territorial
rights of its neighbours.
Just about every week there is
another troubling escalation.
Last week, for instance, it was
China's intrusion into Indonesian waters.
Beijing sent a coast guard ship
to disrupt a standard Indonesian operation to prevent illegal Chinese fishing.
The Indonesians seized the
Chinese fishing vessel in the Natuna Sea. But as they towed the confiscated
boat to Indonesia, the Chinese coast guard rammed the fishing vessel, allowing
it to escape.
Jakarta called in China's
diplomats to protest formally and the Indonesian maritime security chief, Arif
Havas Oegroseno, said the Beijing had created "a new ball
game".
Beijing, unrepentant, said that
the incident occurred in "traditional Chinese fishing grounds".
Indonesia's Oegroseno retorted that a claim of traditional fishing grounds is
not recognised under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea:
"It's very fake, ambiguous,
in terms of since when, since what year does it become historical,
traditional?"
Indonesia joined
the lengthening list of Asian states angry and anxious about China's
assertiveness.
A senior member of the Indonesian
Cabinet, Coordinating Minister for Politics, Legal and Security Affairs Luhut
Pandjaitan, said that his country would respond by sending more troops and
better patrol boats to its naval base in the Natuna Sea.
And on Monday, Japan officially
fired up its latest radar station, part of Tokyo's stepped-up efforts to
respond to China's assertiveness in the East China Sea.
Unfortunately, the US under
Barack Obama spent more than a year in frozen immobility as China plunged into
a frenetic program of base-building on disputed islands in the South China Sea.
The islands are also claimed by the Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan and others.
The US finally stirred into
action in the last few months. America, like Australia, makes no claims and
takes no sides in the disputes, but urges all sides to avoid any destabilising
steps.
The US has, however, moved to
reassure its regional allies that it stands firm in supporting them.
Two weeks ago, for instance, it
signed an agreement to rotate US forces through five Philippines military
bases, a deal that the American ambassador to Manila described as "a
pretty big deal".
China's official newsagency,
Xinhua, responded by accusing the US of "making the Asia-Pacific into a
second Middle East".
Into this tense and difficult
situation crashed the leading Republican candidate for the US presidency.
Donald Trump told the New York
Times that, as president, he would "perhaps" lay claim to one of
the disputed islands of the South China Sea for the US.
This is idiotic and potentially
incendiary in one of the world's most flammable strategic tinder boxes. The US
would be transformed instantaneously from being the guarantor of stability to
being a great force for instability.
It would be tantamount to an
American declaration of hostilities against China, in return for nothing it
actually wants.
Simultaneously, it would insult
the sovereign claims of US friends and allies who also claim the same islands.
And there was more. Trump said
that he would start withdrawing US forces from the two biggest US bases in
Asia, those in Japan and South Korea, unless those countries paid more towards
the cost of the bases.
"I would not do so happily,
but I would be willing to do it," he said, without acknowledging that
Tokyo already pays most of the costs of the American bases on its soil and
South Korea more than a third.
And if Japan, feeling exposed
without reliable US backing, decided that it needed to go nuclear as a result?
"I'm not sure that would be a bad thing for us," Trump said.
The US was "basically
protecting Japan" he said, and "at some point we cannot be the
policemen of the world."
"We're a country that
doesn't have money," he said, striking one of his favourite themes.
"We were a rich country with
a very strong military and tremendous capability in so many ways. We're not
anymore. We have a military that's severely depleted. We have nuclear arsenals
which are in very terrible shape. They don't even know if they work."
The prospect of a nuclear Japan
is deeply alarming for countries including China.
Trump could be president. He's
likely to be the Republican candidate and, according to the US betting markets,
he has about a 40 per cent chance of winning the presidency.
Hillary Clinton, the likely
Democratic candidate, is rated a better chance at 60 per cent.
Even so, it's unsettling for the
Asia-Pacific, the Indo-Pacific and the wider world for one of the leading US
candidates to speak so blithely, so erratically, so carelessly about ripping up
some of the deepest security foundations of the modern world.
In Beijing, Trump's ideas play
into the hands of military hawks. If a future US president could so upend the
remaining structures for stability in the region, then the rational response is
to prepare for a much more unstable situation. And that's a case for even more
Chinese armaments and an even more assertive posture.
And in the capitals of US friends
and allies, Trump's musings will strengthen the hand of those arguing that the
US is an increasingly unreliable ally.
And that means these countries
are more likely to accelerate their own arms build ups, or more likely to
prepare to yield to China's demands.
Either way, it's a recipe for
destabilisation and danger.
Even if he never sets foot in the
Oval Office, Trump is a danger to the stability of Australia and the entire
region.
Peter Hartcher is international editor Sydney
Morning Herald: Illustration: John Shakespeare
No comments:
Post a Comment