Military analysts say it has
been standard practise for Singapore to ship military vehicles home from Taiwan
through Hong Kong
The seizure
of Singapore-bound armoured vehicles by Hong Kong customs officers could be a
“strategic calculation” by Beijing to send a warning shot to Singapore, as the
Chinese foreign ministry said it opposed any sovereign country having
governmental ties with Taiwan, including military exchanges. The interception
of nine advanced combat vehicles at the Kwai Chung container terminal has
spotlighted a four-decade-old military programme between Taiwan and Singapore,
about which Beijing is extremely unhappy but whose existence it has tolerated,
according to military analysts.
The nine vehicles are impounded at a customs facility in Tuen Mun.
An armed forces team from Singapore was due in Hong Kong on Friday night
to try to establish why nine of their brand new military vehicles were
impounded by customs on the way back from Taiwan.
If Beijing is behind the incident on Wednesday, it could demonstrate a
determination by the Chinese government to sever military ties between Taiwan,
which China regards as a renegade province, and Singapore, to which China is
taking an increasingly hostile attitude since the Southeast Asian city state
refuses to fully join China’s orbit.
The nine vehicles currently in the custody of Hong Kong, therefore,
could indicate an upcoming realpolitik power shift in the Chinese culture world
of mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore, as well as an increasingly
confident Chinese government signalling its readiness to thwart military
alliances it dislikes, especially as the Trump administration indicates less
commitment to Asia.
“There have been regular
Singapore-Taiwan military exchanges for a long time” and no similar incidents
have been reported before, said Ni Lexiong, a Shanghai-based military expert.
“This time, it is difficult to exclude the possibility of strategic
calculation,” Ni said. “It is a delicate moment in South East Asia, when the
Obama administration is going out and the new administration is yet to take
power. There is a gap of power in between.”
Beijing has a free hand to deal with the seized vehicles as it wishes,
whether that is to release them, confiscate them or even punish Taiwan or
Singapore, Ni said. Diplomatic and defence authority in Hong Kong belongs to
Beijing.
Although sources within the Hong Kong customs administration said the
seizure of the vehicles was a result of a routine inspection rather than a move
directed by Beijing, the discovery of the undeclared vehicles had already been
reported to China’s foreign ministry in Beijing, a source within the Hong Kong
administration, who declined to be named, told the South China Morning Post.
China’s foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a routine press
conference that all personnel and shipments in and out of Hong Kong must follow
local rules and that the Chinese government always opposes any sovereign state
conducting any form of governmental exchange with Taiwan, including joint
military activities.
Lee Chih-hong, a research fellow at the Longus Institute for Development
and Strategy in Singapore, said it was standard practise for many years for
Singapore to ship military vehicles, without ammunition, back to Singapore via
Hong Kong after military exercises in Taiwan.
“In the past, such things never got reported, but it’s reported this
time – it’s really puzzling,” Lee said.
“There is a view that China is trying to give a hard time to Singapore”
because Beijing is not happy about Singapore’s stance over the South China Sea,
he added.
The military exercise the vehicles are believed to have taken part in is
part of “Project Starlight”, initiated by late Singapore Prime Minister Lee
Kuan Yew and his late Taiwanese counterpart Chiang Kai-shek in 1974, to help
train Singaporean troops overseas, because of the tiny space of the city state.
At the time, the mainland was still very weak and Taiwan hadn’t officially
given up its claim on mainland China.
According to Macau-based military expert Antony Wong Dong, the military
vehicles are Singapore’s AV-81s, the most advanced vehicles Singapore has.
The Chinese government’s attitude towards Singapore has turned hostile
in recent months as Beijing believes Singapore is backing the Philippines’
position on an international arbitration ruling on claims to the South China
Sea.
However, the incident could be just a diplomatic hiccup.
Xu Guangyu, a retired major general at the People’s Liberation Army, the
Chinese military, said the incident shouldn’t be played up.
“I personally do not think we should complicate this simple incident,”
he said . “It should just be handled according to the relevant maritime law.”
“It does trigger speculation in such an international atmosphere, but I
believe it is an accident, not something done on purpose to create tension,” Xu
said. “Even if China wants to send Singapore a signal, there are numerous ways
and channels. This case as leverage is just too loose and weak”.
Even if Beijing is not directly responsible for the seizure, the fact
that Beijing is able to influence or even break the logistics chain between
Taiwan and Singapore will add pressure on the city state.
Arthur Ding, a research fellow at the Institute of International
Relations at Taiwan’s National Chengchi University, said Singapore might be in
a somewhat “awkward” situation to conduct military exchanges with Taiwan now,
at a time of strained relations between Beijing and Taipei.
“Because the Democratic Progressive Party is seen as pro-independence,
if Singaporean troops continue to conduct exercises here, it might give people
an impression that Singapore is supporting the pro-independence government,” he
said.
This article appeared in the
South China Morning Post print edition as:
Singapore military team due in
HK in seized vehicles row
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