China
recently announced that it had reached a consensus on the South China Sea with
three members of Asean. What could be wrong with that? That would be fine,
actually, if Asean had only three members. But Asean has ten full-fledged
members and seven weren’t consulted on that consensus.
What gives?
Take a look at the substance of that
consensus. First, it says that there’s no dispute between Asean and China on
the South China Sea and that disagreements between individual Asean members and
China should not affect Asean-China relations. That’s correct.
Second, according to the consensus,
countries have the right to choose how to resolve their disputes according to
international law. That, too, is correct. But then it adds that the “imposition
of a unilateral approach” would be wrong. Does that refer to the Philippines
going before the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) to seek clarification on
the merits of China’s claim to virtually all of the South China Sea?
If so, the consensus misses the point. For
the Philippine case before the PCA isn’t intended to resolve any territorial or
sovereignty dispute between the Philippines and China. Since it is all about
the validity of the nine-dash line and the nature of the geographic features
enclosed by that line, the case is a matter of interest to all nations that
subscribe to and would make use of freedom of navigation. Just because China
refuses to take part in the PCA legal proceedings does not make the Philippine
suit an “imposition of a unilateral approach.”
Third, the consensus says that according
to Article IV of the DOC, parties in the South China Sea should resolve their territorial
and sovereignty disputes through dialogue and consultation. That’s right on the
money. The devil is in how China behaves when a party attempts to engage it in
bilateral negotiation. As I remember, the Philippines tried to engage China in
such a dialogue but nothing much happened because China treated the Philippines
as a supplicant and not as an equal negotiating partner.
It’s not yet too late. Davao City mayor
Rodrigo Duterte, front-runner in the current Philippine presidential elections,
has broadly hinted that he’s willing to renew bilateral talks with China when
he gets to be president. If China is itself willing to negotiate as an equal
toward a win-win solution, no Philippine president will pass up the chance to
peacefully resolve his country’s territorial dispute with China.
And fourth, the consensus says that Asean
and China are capable enough of jointly safeguarding peace and stability in the
South China Sea. Well said. And China can substantiate this assertion by
promptly concluding with Asean a Code of Conduct (COC) on parties in the South
China Sea.
Then the consensus hastens to add that
external parties should play a constructive role, instead of the reverse. What
does that mean? Does that mean that the navies of the US, Japan, India and
Australia should stay away from the disputed waters of the South China Sea? If
so, it’s an unrealistic expectation. So long as China keeps reclaiming
geographic features and militarizing them, then so long will external powers
feel called upon to carry out “freedom of navigation operations” and to show
China that it isn’t the only boy in the playground that has military muscle.
What’s China up to anyway? Soon after the
announcement of the consensus, Bilahari Kausikan of the Singapore ministry of
foreign affairs commented that this could be seen as China’s way of dividing
Asean before the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) could rule on the merits
of China’s nine-dash line and its claim to virtually all of the South China
Sea. Former Asean secretary-general Ong Keng Yong, now Singapore’s
ambassador-at-large, added that the consensus was tantamount to China meddling
in Asean internal affairs.
That raised China’s hackles. Vice-Foreign
Minister Liu Zhenmin asked Singapore to explain the statements of its two
senior diplomats. In fact it’s China that has some explaining to do.
For starters, why is it only China that’s
announcing the consensus? Why is it doing all the talking for all four states
involved? And if the consensus were as non-controversial and well intentioned
as China claims it to be, why didn’t China go for a full Asean-China consensus?
Instead, it roped in just three, two of which are seen by many as its clients.
One of them, Laos, happens to be the
current chair of Asean. If the maelstrom of controversy surrounding the
consensus gained velocity, then the credibility of Laos as chair of Asean would
be severely compromised. So would be the credibility of Asean centrality.
An Asean diminished by dissensions,
including one fostered by China, will not stay relevant for long. In that
event, everybody will lose, including China, which would be bereft of a robust
and credible partner in the South China Sea. Instead it will have several
individual claimants forever diplomatically swarming like a bunch of wasps
against its position on the South China Sea.
It won’t enjoy the kind of peace possible
only with a strong and united Asean partner in the region. And worse, the
external powers that China wishes would stay away from the South China Sea
would have all the more reason to carry out freedom of navigation operations
(fonops) on a perennial basis.
The smart thing for China to do right now
is to speedily conclude a COC with Asean and thus prove for good that it can
deal constructively with an Asean that’s united like a true community. An early
COC would restore some of the credibility that Asean lost as a result of the
unfortunate consensus and to some extent refurbish China’s fading claim to a
peaceful rise.
Jamil Maidan Flores is a Jakarta-based
literary writer whose interests include philosophy and foreign policy.
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