The South
China Sea finally became a major news item in Indonesia when local media
widely reported a March 19 incident involving the 300-ton Chinese fishing
boat Kway Fey 10078, caught red-handed within Indonesia's exclusive economic
zone off the Natuna Islands.
After arresting eight crew members of
the Kway Fey, the officers of the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Affairs
(KKP) patrol boat Hiu 11 were towing the Chinese vessel back to their base
when two Chinese Coast Guard vessels appeared one after another in hot
pursuit. One rammed the Kway Fey to prevent it from crossing into Indonesian
territorial waters and their combined strength forced the Indonesian officers
to abandon the impounded vessel.
The incident has generated both outrage
and indignation in the country. However, probably unbeknownst to many
Indonesians, the Kway Fey incident was not the first of its kind. Three years
ago, on March 26, another KKP patrol vessel, Hiu 001, fared worse in a
similar tussle as it ended up having to release both the captured boat and
the detainees after the Chinese Maritime Law Enforcement boat Yuzheng 310
"equipped with machine guns, light cannons and electronic sensors"
outmaneuvered it. The Hiu crew testified later that they had been unable to
radio for help because their satellite phone stopped working as soon as the
Yuzheng appeared on the horizon. The difference between the 2013 and 2016
incidents is that the Indonesian government chose to publicize the latter
rather than stick to the old formula of silent diplomatic protest.
Although not a claimant, Indonesia no
doubt must come up with a better strategy to deal with China's moves in the
South China Sea. The problem is that the predominant current thinking on the
issue by most Indonesian officials is based on the suspicion that China is
after the hydrocarbon deposits in the Natuna seabed. While a resourceful
power such as China certainly would make use of the deposits if it were
allowed to get its hand on them, there are signs that competition for
resources lies not at the heart of China's claims in the area.
As Yale law professor Taisu Zhang has
highlighted lately, a new ideological revival is unfolding in China and among
its policy makers. Revived interest in ancient Chinese thinkers and
philosophers including Confucius, Mencius, Zhuangzi and Han Fei, is evident
as Chinese leaders quote them in their speeches. In 2013 the state even
sponsored a new Confucius Academy in Guiyang's provincial capital.
No longer content with the status of a
new economic giant, Beijing now seeks to become the world's new ideological
paragon, in complete antithesis to the "Western" ideals of
democracy and capitalism. Never since the fall of the Soviet Union has the
"Western model" faced such a challenge. Beijing clearly believes that
it has proved beyond any doubt that economic success does not necessarily
entail democracy, liberalism and respect for individual human rights as
"Western ideology" insists.
In its attempt to go back to its roots
such as Confucianism, China seems to be molding an alternative with which to
challenge the often prescribed Western path of civilization. By harking back
to its home-grown thinkers for guidance, it also seeks to express
self-confidence and nationalism.
Consequently, China's growing
assertiveness in the South China Sea may well be part of the thinking in
Beijing. China's new ideological war is unequivocally fought against the
international US-led status quo. Simply put, China will use new
interpretations of its own "ancient wisdom and tradition" to make
the necessary changes to enable a restoration of its place as a world center
of economic, military and intellectual power.
Indeed, to explain away the recent
Natuna incident, China claimed that the area was part of its
"traditional fishing grounds." The same answer was given in
response to Malaysia's protest a few days later when a large Chinese fishing
flotilla was spotted around the South Luconia Shoal. In its dispute with the
Philippines over the Spratly Islands, China claims "historical rights"
as the basis of its argument.
While neo-Confucianism may be the new
normal for Chinese leaders today, it wasn't always so. The Chinese Communist
Party used to denounce it as part of the decadent old China. A telling, yet
probably apocryphal, tale was often told how the Confucian scholars in the
Qing court vetoed the use of gunpowder for military purposes, deeming it
"barbaric and unethical." The moral of the story was that China, as
the nation that invented gunpowder, foolishly refused to use it to strengthen
its defenses and ended up the loser against Western imperialism.
Disillusionment with the "Western
model" is not confined to China, mainly because the most prominent
ambassador for these ideals, the United States of America, has not always
been a good role model for them. The feeling is shared by many Asian
countries. The military coup in Thailand and the nationalist-conservative
stance of the Jokowi government in Indonesia on matters such as capital
punishment suggest that a slow retreat from Western ideals is taking place.
It certainly creates an interesting
situation for the current Indonesian government, which finds more ideological
resonance with the Chinese model and yet is unsettled by its implementation
in the South China Sea.
Johannes Nugroho is a writer from
Surabaya.
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