A Forgotten Fact: In 1969, Russia and China Almost Went
to War (And It Could Have Gone Nuclear)
Would China have used nukes? Much
would have depended on how the Chinese reacted to defeats on the battlefield.
If the Chinese leadership decided that they needed to “use or lose” their
nuclear forces in anticipation of decisive Soviet victory, they could easily have
incurred a preemptive Soviet attack. Given that Moscow viewed Beijing as
abjectly insane, Moscow could very well have decided to eliminate the Chinese
nuclear force before it became a problem.
Americans tend to remember the Cuban
Missile Crisis as the most dangerous moment in Cold War brinksmanship. Despite
some tense moments, Washington and Moscow resolved that crisis with only the
death of U.S. Air Force pilot Maj. Rudolph Anderson Jr.
Seven years later, in March 1969, a contingent of People’s Liberation Army
(PLA) soldiers raided a Soviet
border outpost on Zhenbao Island, killing dozens and injuring scores.
The incident brought Russia and China to the brink of war, a conflict that
might have led to the use of nuclear weapons. But after two weeks of clashes,
the conflict trailed off.
What if the brief 1969 conflict between
China and the Soviet Union had escalated?
History:
The incident on Zhenbao Island, where
the initial ambush and the bulk of the fighting occurred, represented the nadir
of Soviet-Chinese relations. Just ten years earlier, Beijing and Moscow had
stood hand in hand as bulwarks of the Communist world. Struggles over ideology,
leadership and resources, however, resulted in a sharp split between the allies
that had global repercussions. The split exacerbated territorial disputes that
had existed since Tsarist and Imperial times. The long, poorly
demarcated border left numerous gray zones in which China and the USSR both
claimed sovereignty.
After a few minor incidents,
the Zhenbao Island incident drove tensions through the roof. A Soviet
counterattack incurred serious casualties, as did a similar incident
in Xinjiang in August. A consensus has emerged on both sides that the
Chinese leadership prepared for and orchestrated the clash. Why would the
Chinese provoke their much more powerful neighbor? And what if the Soviets had
responded more aggressively to the Chinese provocation?
Avenues of Escalation:
In the immediate wake of the conflict,
both the USSR and China prepared for war, with the Red
Army redeploying to the Far East and the PLA going into
full mobilization. The Soviets enjoyed an overwhelming technological advantage
over China in 1969. However, Beijing had constructed the largest army in the
world, much of which mustered within reach of the Sino-Soviet border.
The Red Army, by contrast, concentrated its strength in Eastern Europe, where
it could prepare for a conflict with NATO. Consequently, at the moment of the
clash, the Chinese could plausibly claim conventional superiority along much of
the border.
However, China’s manpower advantage didn’t
mean that the PLA could sustain an offensive into the USSR. The
Chinese lacked the logistics and airpower necessary to seize
substantial amounts of Soviet territory. Moreover, the extremely
long Sino-Soviet border gave the Soviets ample opportunity for
response. With a NATO attack unlikely, the Soviets could have transferred substantial
forces from Europe, attacking into Xinjiang and points west.
The most critical avenue of potential
advance lay in Manchuria, where the Red Army had launched a devastating,
lightning quick offensive in the waning days of World War II. Despite its size,
the PLA of 1969 had no better hope of stopping such an offensive than
the Kwantung Army had in 1945, and the loss of Manchuria would have
proven devastating to China’s economic power and political legitimacy. In any
case, Soviet airpower would have made short work of the Chinese air
force, subjecting Chinese cities, communication centers and military bases to
severe air attack.
After conquering Manchuria in 1945, the
Soviets looted Japanese industry and left. A similar scenario might have ensued
in 1969, but only if the Chinese leadership could bring itself to face reality.
With the worst excesses of the Cultural Revolution in the very recent rear-view
mirror, and competing factions still trying to ideologically out-radicalize one
another, Moscow might have struggled to find a productive partner for
peace negotiations. Continued Soviet advances might have resembled the Japanese
main advance of 1937, albeit without the naval dominance that the Imperial Japanese
Navy enjoyed. Expecting such attacks, the PLA might have withdrawn to
the interior, conducting a scorched earth campaign along the way.
Nuclear?:
China tested its first nuclear device in
1964, theoretically giving Beijing an independent deterrent capability.
However, their delivery systems left much to be desired—liquid-fueled missiles
of uncertain reliability that required hours to prepare, and that could only
remain on the launch pad for a limited amount of time. Moreover, Chinese
missiles of the era lacked the range to strike vital Soviet targets in European
Russia. China’s bomber force—consisting of an extremely limited number
of Tu-4 (a Soviet copy of the U.S. B-29) and H-6 (a copy of the
Soviet Tu-16 Badger)—would have fared very poorly against the USSR’s
sophisticated air defense network.
The Soviets, on the other
hand, were on the verge of achieving nuclear parity with the United States. The
USSR had a modern, sophisticated arsenal of tactical and strategic nuclear
weapons, easily capable of destroying China’s nuclear deterrent, its core
military formations and its major cities. Sensitive to international opinion,
the Soviet leadership would have resisted launching a full scale nuclear
assault against China (U.S. and Chinese propaganda would have had a field day),
but a limited strike against Chinese nuclear facilities, as well as tactical
attacks on deployed Chinese forces might have seemed more reasonable. Much
would have depended on how the Chinese reacted to defeats on the battlefield. If
the Chinese leadership decided that they needed to “use or lose” their nuclear
forces in anticipation of decisive Soviet victory, they could easily have
incurred a preemptive Soviet attack. Given that Moscow viewed Beijing as
abjectly insane, Moscow could very well have decided to eliminate the Chinese
nuclear force before it became a problem.
U.S. Reaction:
The United States reacted to the clashes with caution. While the border
conflict reassured Washington that the Sino-Soviet split remained in
effect, officials disagreed over
the likelihood and consequences of broader conflict. Through various
official and non-official channels, the Soviets probed U.S. attitudes towards
China. Reputedly, the United States reacted negatively to Soviet overtures in
1969 about a joint attack on Chinese nuclear facilities. However, even if
Washington did not want to see China burn, it would not likely have engaged in
any serious, affirmative effort to protect Beijing from Moscow’s wrath.
What Comes Next?:
A decade before, Dwight Eisenhower had
outlined the Soviet Union’s biggest obstacle in a war with China: what to do
after you win. The Soviets had neither the capacity, nor the interest, in
governing another continent-sized territory, especially one that would likely
have included masses of disaffected resisters. And the United States,
husbanding a “legitimate” government on Formosa, would eagerly have supported a
variety of resistance elements against a Soviet occupation. Indeed, if a rump
Beijing had survived the war, the United States might still have considered
“unleashing Chiang,” in an effort to restore parts of China to the Western
column.
The most likely outcome of war would have
been short Chinese success, followed by a sharp, destructive Soviet rebuke.
Such an outcome would have served to drive Beijing even more fully into the
arms of the United States, which is likely one reason that the Soviets decided
not to risk it.
Robert Farley, a frequent contributor to
the National Interest, is author of The Battleship Book.
He serves as a Senior Lecturer at the Patterson School of Diplomacy and
International Commerce at the University of Kentucky. His work includes
military doctrine, national security, and maritime affairs. He blogs at Lawyers, Guns and Money and Information Dissemination and
the Diplomat.
This first appeared in Februrary 2016
and is being reposted due to reader interest.
Image Credit:
Creative Commons.
No comments:
Post a Comment