Are the Senkaku Islands Worth War Between China, Japan
and America?
Big wars sometimes start over small
stakes. For instance, Germany’s “Iron Chancellor,” Otto von Bismarck,
presciently warned that a European war would begin as a result of “some damned
foolish thing in the Balkans.” Soon, a royal assassination spawned World War I,
which spread conflict around the globe.
National insults, trade opportunities and
territorial claims also resulted in their share of stupid, counterproductive
conflicts. The assertive young American republic threatened Great Britain with
war over the Canadian border and launched an invasion to vindicate its dubious
territorial claims against Mexico. A few decades later, the slightly more
mature United States fought a lengthy counterinsurgency campaign against
independence-minded Filipinos to preserve its territorial booty from the
Spanish-American War.
Alliances sometimes accelerate the race to war. Assured of the support of
Russia and Germany, respectively, Serbia and the Austro-Hungarian Empire were
recklessly intransigent in summer 1914. Greater flexibility might not have
prevented the conflict, but alliance-backed inflexibility ensured war.
History
illustrates the dangers posed by the Asia-Pacific’s many territorial squabbles.
None of the contested claims is worth a fight, let alone a great-power
conflict. Yet they could become a spark like that in Sarajevo a century ago.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis increased the danger on his recent trip to Japan
when he “reassured” the Abe government that Washington, DC was firmly in its
corner.
The Senkaku Islands—called the Diaoyus by
China—are uninhabited rocks of limited intrinsic value. However, they confer
ocean and seabed control and corresponding fishing, navigation and hydrocarbon
benefits. Nationalist sentiments loom equally large. The islands are controlled
by Tokyo but also claimed by the People’s Republic of China. Beijing’s case is
serious—better, in my view, than its less credible South China Sea claims—but
Japan insists that there is no issue to discuss.
That leaves the PRC with little choice but
to adopt more confrontational tactics to assert its “rights.” Tokyo took direct
control of the Senkaku Islands in 2012 to forestall their use by nationalists
for protests, which heightened tensions. The following year, China declared an
Air Defense Identification Zone over the islands, though so far the ADIZ has
more symbolic than real. The PRC also has engaged in fishing and oil
exploration in nearby waters, sending in coast guard ships to defend Chinese
operations.
Japan felt secure in its intransigence after winning the Obama administration’s
commitment that the “mutual” defense treaty between the two nations covered
territory administered by the central government, even if claimed by other
states. Secretary Mattis was equally explicit. He affirmed not only
Washington’s support for Japan’s defense, but also stated, “I made clear that
our longstanding policy on the Senkaku Islands stands. The United States will
continue to recognize Japanese administration of the islands, and as such
Article 5 of the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty applies.” In other words, America
will defend Tokyo’s contested claim.
The PRC responded sharply. The United
States should “avoid making the issue more complicated and bringing instability
to the regional situation,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said. Indeed,
he explained, the
U.S.-Japan security treaty is “a product of the Cold War, which should not
impair China’s territorial sovereignty and legitimate rights.”
Adding to the combustible atmosphere is
the apparent belief—of at least some officials on both sides—that war is
inevitable. For instance, less than a year ago Trump strategist Steve Bannon expressed “no doubt”
that “we’re going to war in the South China Sea in five to ten years.” He
complained that the Chinese are “taking their sandbars and making basically
stationary aircraft carriers and putting missiles on those.” While the Senkaku
Islands are not part of the South China Sea, the same principles apply.
War sounded almost close at Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson’s confirmation hearing. He insisted: “We’re going to have
to send China a clear signal that, first, the island-building stops and, second,
your access to those islands also is not going to be allowed.” Using force to
do so would be an act of war against any country, including America.
Chinese responded accordingly. The
People’s Liberation Army website quoted one senior officer
as stating: “A ‘war within the president’s term’ or ‘war breaking out tonight’
are not just slogans, they are becoming a practical reality.” He called for
increased military deployments in the region.
The political leadership
is less transparent about its views—the residents of Zhongnanhai don’t
typically appear on radio shows. However, Ian Bremmer of the Eurasia Group
opined that “the Chinese government is quite concerned about the potential for
direct confrontation with the Trump administration.” Although President Xi
Jinping appears reasonably pragmatic while ruthlessly repressive, he isn’t
likely to abandon what he sees as “core” Chinese interests. Moreover,
nationalists and unreconstructed leftists, though differing on economic policy,
share a distrust of the United States.
A mutual belief in inevitable conflict
could become reality. Before World War I, a number of high-ranking European
officials believed that war was coming. For them, it made sense to accept, even
embrace, the onset of the conflict in August 1914 and strike while victory
still remained possible.
In the case of China versus the United States, such shared sentiment may
accelerate military spending. The Trump administration is demanding increased
outlays despite the lack of any serious threat to vital U.S. interests. Rather,
the expanded force is to enhance America’s ability to intervene against other
nations, particularly China.
This gives the PRC an even greater
incentive to respond, since the United States is challenging what it views (and
America would view, if the situation was reversed) as “core” national
interests. As the United States increases military deployments in the region,
so will the PRC. After Mattis’ visit, China sent three warships near the
Senkaku Islands. The risks of a violent clash will rise accordingly.
Some
Washington officials might be tempted to advocate a more aggressive approach
today, while the PRC is weaker and America is wealthier, backed by numerous
allies and able to deploy a more powerful military. In this view, let the
inevitable showdown come sooner rather than later.
Alas, that could become a prescription for
years if not decades of conflict. America has a vital interest in protecting
its own territory, population, and constitutional and economic systems. But
China threatens none of them. The United States has important interests in the
independence of its allies and freedom of navigation in the Asia-Pacific
region. So far, the PRC has not challenged either of those things.
Washington understandably views its dominance of East Asia up to China’s
borders as an advantage. But it is far less important than protecting America’s
own security. Such control is not even necessary for preserving navigational
freedom and allied security. More important, U.S. policy conflicts with what
Beijing views as its “core” interests. Imagine Washington’s reaction if China
attempted to maintain a similar position along the eastern seaboard and in the
Caribbean. Nor does the presumption that America could defeat the PRC offer
much comfort. The price would be high. China can build missiles and submarines
faster than the United States can construct aircraft carriers. The Chinese
people would be more committed to a fight if it is seen as protecting their
homeland—more so than Americans would be prone to getting involved in a faraway
conflict that hampers Washington’s will.
Additionally, the United States count on
support from allies not directly affected. Would Australia and South Korea risk
the long-term hostility of China, which will be in their next-door neighbor
forever? Indeed, Japan made clear that it would not join the United States’
“freedom of navigation operations” in the South China Sea. Explained Japanese defense
minister Tomomi Inada: “I told Secretary Mattis that Japan supports
the U.S. military’s freedom of navigation operation in the sea. But the [Self
Defense Force] will not be sent to the area.” Inada clearly means “supports” in
quotation marks.
Finally, an American “victory” almost
certainly would guarantee long-term hostility and future conflict. It took two
world wars to determine Germany’s place in the global order. And it took “only”
two because, after the second one, Germany ended up divided and well behind the
United States and Soviet Union. While the PRC’s collapse as a country is
possible, it is unlikely. In fact, military defeat might spur nationalist rage
and result in greater centralization.
The Communist regime could fall. But that
probably would spawn an authoritarian government rather than a democracy. And
any democracy is more likely to be nationalist/populist than liberal. Whether
the almost inevitable “Second Sino-American War” likely would turn out in
Washington’s favor is less clear. There could be a third one as well, if China
rebounded. The United States might find that just as battles can be pyrrhic, so
can wars. It’s an experience America should avoid.
U.S. officials have good reason to remind
China of the costs of conflict and the importance of settling even contentious
territorial disputes peacefully. At the same time, however, the Trump
administration should avoid issuing blank checks to allies seeming to exempt
them from having to deal with, and even discuss, those same territorial
challenges. Sometimes blank checks get cashed with disastrous consequences,
like Imperial Germany’s support for the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which sped
Europe’s plunge into the World War I abyss.
The Senkaku Islands are of little
practical importance to China and Japan, and essentially of no importance to
America. But as the locus of a dangerous game of geopolitical chicken, they
could spark another Sino-Japanese war, which would be disastrous. And if that
turned into a Sino-American conflict, the consequences would be incalculable.
President Donald Trump should never forget these dangers as he confronts
China’s growing ambition and power.
Doug
Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and a former special assistant
to President Ronald Reagan.
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