Under
what circumstances would Australia join in a war against China? RAND’s report War with China: Thinking
Through the Unthinkable (WwC) illuminates the gravity of that
decision
WwC explores “two variables:
intensity (from mild to severe) and duration (from a few days to a year or
more).” It models a number of conventional war scenarios confined to East
Asia/Western Pacific between 2015 and 2025 and waged with maritime
assets—surface and submarine—and aircraft, missiles, space assets and in
cyberspace. The US homeland isn’t attacked but assets in China are.
WwC finds the military and economic costs to China and the US are high and
increase rapidly with intensity and duration. WcC doesn’t quantify costs to allies
like Australia though economic costs are forecast to be “immensely costly for
the belligerents, East Asia, and the world.” As a minimum, as Paul Dibb has observed,
China mightn’t spare Australia’s critical infrastructure especially
intelligence capability.
Australia’s 2016 Defense White Paper says
that “major conflict between the United States and China is unlikely.” Maybe
so, but the US is preparing for a high intensity battle. Benjamin Schreer’s analysis
has provided an overview of the ‘US AirSea Battle’
strategy in East Asia. Although that strategy has now been swept up into the Joint Concept for Access and
Maneuver in the Global Commons (JAMGC); the contingency
planning for a war continues. China is also planning for contingencies
in East Asia and is intent on
being able to defeat US power projection capabilities.
Australia’s experience with direct armed
attack on its soil is limited to one instance. Since 1945
the major conventional wars involving Australian forces—Korea, Vietnam, Gulf
War, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria—have been distant with no accompanying threat
of a conventional attack on Australian territory. Australia’s reasons for
entering into these wars were disparate, and complex. In none of those cases
did the government have to consider the level of threat to Australia’s
territory, economy or its forces as that involved in a war with China.
Is Australia now inextricably entwined
with US military planning in East Asia: because of ANZUS, or as a consequence
of US expectations created through combined planning, capability cooperation,
intelligence sharing and exercising, and US basing? Is automatic Australia will
entering a conflict with China if the US does? Technically ANZUS commits Australia
to ‘act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional
processes’ to an attack on the US. But the intimate nature of the alliance
probably would make it politically difficult for any Australian government not
to join in most circumstances.
Still there must be a threshold. An attack
on US forces by China would almost inevitably invoke ANZUS. But would Australia
join in if the US struck first—a preventative
war—to stop China from achieving military parity with the US in East Asia?
Presumably Australia would seriously consider entering a war on the side of the
US if China attacked a treaty ally of the US—Japan, South Korea or the
Philippines—but not US forces directly. But what if Japan were the aggressor?
Perhaps a blockade of maritime vessels or interception of commercial aircraft
in international territory would suffice. A Chinese invasion of a South East
Asia country might be enough. If there were a massive cyber attack on the US or
Europe originating in China would we join in a military response?
In formulating a war policy it is to be
hoped that an Australian government would weigh a number of factors, first and
foremost being the war aims—how likely they are to be achieved and whether they
are worth the economic, civilian and military costs. Secondly, irrespective of the
outcome, WwC indicates that US power projection capabilities and economic
strength would be seriously weakened. Postwar Australia’s security would then
be inevitably also weakened and its economy damaged. Victory would be pyrrhic.
Afterwards Australia and China would still be on this same side of the Pacific,
even if the US prevailed in the conflict. The government should heed
Clausewitz’s words; “even the ultimate outcome of a war is not always to be
regarded as final. The defeated state often considers the outcome merely as a
transitory evil, for which a remedy may still be found in political conditions
at some later date.” The postwar East Asia environment would be difficult.
Australia would be in unfamiliar territory contemplating such a war.
Preparing the ADF to defend Australia’s interests is one thing. Contemplating
the ruinous consequences for Australia and the region of a calamitous war
between China and the US another. The government might be inclined to elevate
the avoidance of an East Asian war to the highest national interest. And make
it the prime objective of Australia’s foreign policy. The National Interest
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