The anniversary of Pearl Harbour is
commemorated on Dec 8 in Japan — the time locally when, thousands of miles
away, its ships and warplanes sank much of the United States Pacific Fleet and
launched war against America. For 75 years now, many Japanese have reflected on
that moment with great remorse, appalled by the hubris and miscalculation that
led to the attack. Later this month, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will
travel to Pearl Harbour to commemorate the tragedy.
Sadly, though, the leaders and citizens of
another Asian power appear to have forgotten those lessons.
For all the
differences between Imperial Japan in the 1930s and Communist China today, I
cannot help but see parallels between the two. Like Japan then, China is a
rising Asian nation whose thinking is informed by patriotism, suspicion of
outsiders and the remnants of an inferiority complex toward the West. Its
military seems not entirely constrained by civilian control. And just as Japan
did in the 1930s, China is defying international opinion and challenging the
maritime status quo in the western Pacific, where the US defends vital sea
lines of communication for all nations.
The roots of this stance lie in a history very similar to
Japan’s. Both nations suffered at the hands of Western powers. In Japan, at the
end of the Edo period in 1853, American “Black Ships” sailed into Uraga Bay. US
pressure ultimately forced the new Meiji government to institute an “open-door
policy” welcoming foreign trade and traders.
The trauma China suffered was more tragic and
complicated. After defeat in the 19th century Opium Wars against the British,
China had to surrender Hong Kong, open Chinese ports and sign “unequal
treaties” with Western powers that infringed on Chinese sovereignty. Even now,
and unlike in Japan, the historical sense of humiliation caused by these episodes
has not healed among most Chinese.
MILITARY EXPLOITS
To some degree, that sense of injury still motivates the
People’s Liberation Army, which is determined to defend China’s sovereignty and
territorial unity.
In 1930s Japan, the military exploited Article 11 of the
Constitution of the Japanese Empire of 1889, which stipulated: “The Emperor has
the supreme command of the Army and the Navy.” The military interpreted this to
mean that they were allowed an independent chain of command, reporting directly
to the Emperor rather than a civilian prime minister.
The PLA does not report to China’s premier or its
rubber-stamp legislature either, but solely to the chairman of the Central
Military Commission — in this case, President Xi Jinping. Unlike in Western
democracies, where the tradition of civilian control of the military has a long
history, it is disturbing to hear nationalistic outbursts from Chinese generals
and admirals that could easily be mistaken for policy.
Worse, there are questions about whether a lack of
oversight has contributed to a series of provocative actions in the air and on
the high seas.
On multiple occasions earlier this year, Chinese jets
flew dangerously close to US reconnaissance planes. In December 2013, PLA naval
vessels “irresponsibly” harassed the USS Cowpens in the South China Sea. All
this heightens the risk of an accident that could very easily lead to a
shooting war.
China is doing this — as Japan once did — in a manner at
odds with the status quo and international consensus.
The artificial islands it recently created by landfilling
in the South China Sea seem to be a Chinese version of the “Manchurian
Incident” of 1931 — a pretext Japan used for asserting sovereignty over
disputed areas. Last July’s International Court of Arbitration award
challenging China’s island-building is a contemporary version of the Lytton
Commission report, which exposed Japan’s illicit aggression.
At the very least, China faces several of the same
critical questions the Japanese government and military did in the 1930s: Can
the country look past historical traumas and accept the existing regional and
global order? Can it peacefully coexist with neighbours both strong and weak?
Can civilian leaders control the armed forces and limit their influence over policy?
Seventy-five years ago, Japan could not answer those
questions in the affirmative; China still has time to do so. It is up to the
Chinese people to decide whether they want to accept the geopolitical status
quo, or try to salve their historical hurts by overturning it. Before choosing
the latter course, they should do what many Japanese do at this time of year:
Remember the consequences of choosing wrong. BLOOMBERG
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Kuni Miyake, a former Japanese diplomat stationed in
Washington, Beijing, Cairo and Baghdad, is a visiting professor at Ritsumeikan
University.
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