As China diplomatically confronts the United States
and South Korea over new missile defenses and intensifies pressure on Japan at
sea over disputed islets, Beijing is signaling it is prepared to stand its
ground on two key regional fronts.
Mainland analysts see little immediate chance for an easing of tensions
now roiling across Northeast Asia, saying a rising China is showing it is keen
to shape its own battlefield despite fresh threats.
“This action is China saying to the world that it has the ability to
fight two regional conflicts on its doorstep,” said Ni Lexiong, a naval expert
at the Shanghai University of Political Science and Law.
“If [Japan] is actively making provocations in our South China Sea, then
in the East China Sea, on its doorway, it will face a little pressure,” Ni
said.
Beijing’s claims to much of the South China Sea were invalidated last
month in an emphatic ruling by an arbitration court in The Hague in a case
brought by rival claimant, the Philippines.
The region’s deepening fault lines after the ruling were exposed at the
weekend as a fleet of Chinese coast guard and fishing vessels sailed near
Japanese-controlled islets in the East China Sea. Japan warned China on Tuesday
ties were “deteriorating markedly”.
Tokyo worries that Chinese control of the South China Sea, through which
much of the oil it imports is shipped, threatens its national security and
takes Beijing a step closer to extending its influence into the Western
Pacific.
Japan has cranked up assistance recently to two countries who have
territorial disputes with China in the South China Sea, the Philippines and
Vietnam.
Japan’s administration of the disputed islands it calls Senkaku, and
China calls Diaoyu, puts them under the long-standing security treaty between
Washington and Tokyo.
Kevin Maher, a Washington security consultant and a former head of the
State Department’s Office of Japan Affairs, said he thinks China is trying to
warn Japan not to interfere in the South China Sea after Tokyo strongly
endorsed the Hague ruling.
China “wants to see how far they can push until they get pushed back,”
Maher said. “Their ultimate goal is hegemony in the South China Sea and the
East China Sea.”
MISSILE DEFENSE
At the same time, South Korea’s presidential Blue House rebuked China
for criticizing Seoul’s decision to deploy an advanced U.S. anti-missile
defense system, urging Beijing to instead work harder to rein in North Korean
nuclear and missile tests.
While China has grown increasingly irritated over North Korea’s nuclear
and missile tests, it vehemently opposes South Korea’s decision to host a
Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) unit with the U.S. military.
Beijing sees THAAD’s radar system, capable of peering into China’s
military installations, as part of Washington’s strategy of containment, with
the two powers clashing over China’s possible militarization of rocks and
reefs in the disputed South China Sea.
THAAD’s location was announced a day after The Hague court ruled against
China’s claims in sea, through which some $5 trillion of cargo passes annually.
South Korea and the United States have said THAAD would only be used in defense
against North Korean ballistic missiles.
Washington’s alliances with Japan and South Korea are crucial to its
strategic pivot to Asia but the three countries have been coordinating with
China over the years in a flagging effort to curtail North Korea’s nuclear
ambitions.
North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test and has launched a series
of missiles in recent months, the latest on Wednesday, when one ballistic
missile that flew about 1,000 km (600 miles) landed near Japanese-controlled
waters.
The economic stakes in the region are high as well: Japan, South Korea
and China account for a quarter of the world’s economy and tensions among them
risk having a chilling effect on trade and investment at a time of slower
growth.
Yet the strong economic ties and the stumbling diplomacy could help
defuse potential clashes.
“China has its own limits to where it can go,” said Lee Tai-hwan,
director of the China studies centre at the Sejong Institute near Seoul. “It
can’t simply stop complying with U.N. sanctions against North Korea. They don’t
want to leave a bad example in relations with neighboring countries by doing
something bad to South Korea.”
By
Michael Martina and Tim Kelly (Additional reporting by Greg Torode in Hong Kong and Ju-min Park in
Seoul. Editing by Bill Tarrant.)
No comments:
Post a Comment