China’s Grand Strategy
The first goal of all successive Chinese dynasties
throughout the centuries was to gain and maintain control of the heartland
(Han), the core of which consists of major Chinese rivers, is abundant with
productive lands and is full of people. A further logical step is maintenance
of influence over the buffer zones which surround the Han core and consist of
mountainous regions to the west, desert lands to the north-west and impregnable
forests to the south. The third major imperative was historically to protect
China’s coastline from foreign powers. However, since this threat was quite
rare in the ancient and medieval periods of Chinese history, the country did
not see any need to develop powerful naval capabilities. The Yangtze and Yellow
rivers, with surrounding fertile lands, produced enough to feed large numbers
of population living in the Han core and as such, in an age without
transcontinental trade routes and the only way to connect with the Middle East
and Europe being the famous Silk Road, the geographic boundaries (mountains,
jungles, deserts and the sea) from all sides made China essentially a closed
country with self-sufficient economic means.
In other words, where previously China’s insularity was a geopolitical
advantage rather than a significant constraint, from the late 20th century this
was no longer the case. With international trade routes and various supply
chains, China has to be open and, in many cases, rely upon raw materials
brought from abroad via sea routes. Thence comes China’s fourth geopolitical
imperative: protection of international trade lines and resource hubs. This
will only be viable through two options: finding alternative land routes such
as One Belt, One Road or by building a powerful military fleet capable of
securing various resources and global supply chains across the Asia Pacific and
elsewhere.
Building a powerful navy will mean collusion with the United States,
whose world primacy rests upon domination of sea lines and relevant security
alliances in Europe and Asia-Pacific. Any diminution of the US sea power will
have a direct impact on the world order, considering the importance which
Washington attaches to developments in foreign powers’ naval capabilities.
Chinese naval technology may still be substantially behind current US
capabilities. Indeed, the US has 11 aircraft carriers, while the Chinese only
one (which still lacks an aircraft wing capable of operating off a carrier
deck). However, the trends indicate that China has been making significant
progress in the last several decades, as the country is rapidly developing new
destroyers, amphibs, stealth fighters and long-range weapons. This could
potentially expand expeditionary military operations around the globe.
China continues to construct an array of offensive and defensive
capabilities to enable the PLA to gain maritime superiority within the first
island chain in Asia pacific. Those are the islands which run from the Kurils,
through Taiwan, to Borneo, roughly encompassing the Yellow Sea, East China Sea,
and South China Sea.
China’s broad range of anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) and launch
platforms, as well as submarine launched torpedoes and naval mines, allow the
People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) to create a lethal threat against enemies
approaching Chinese waters and operating areas.
The PLAN continues to develop into a global force, gradually extending
its operational reach beyond East Asia and the Indo-Pacific into a sustained
ability to operate at increasingly longer ranges. The PLAN’s latest naval
platforms enable combat operations beyond the reach of China’s land-based
defenses.
Furthermore, the PLAN now has a sizable force of high-capability
logistical replenishment ships to support long-distance, long-duration
deployments, including two new ships being built specifically to support
aircraft carrier operations. The expansion of naval operations beyond China’s
immediate region will also facilitate non-war uses of military force.
The PLAN’s force structure continues to evolve, incorporating more
platforms with the versatility for both offshore and long-distance power
projection. China is engaged in series production of the LUYANG III-class DDG,
the JIANGKAI II-class FFG, and the JIANGDAO-class FFL.
Even on the aircraft level, despite its numerical weaknesses, China
continues to learn lessons from operating its only Ukraine-produced aircraft
carrier, Liaoning. The Chinese first domestically produced aircraft carrier,
launched in 2017, will be commissioned in 2019 (according to various sources
this will be a multi-carrier force). China’s next generation of carriers will
probably have greater endurance and be capable of launching more varied types
of fixed-wing aircraft than Liaoning. There also comes PLAN Aviation’s progress
on improving capabilities to conduct offensive and defensive offshore
operations such as strike, air and missile defense, strategic mobility, and
early warning and reconnaissance missions.
Overall, for the moment, the PLAN’s ability to perform missions beyond
the first island chain is modest. What is important here is that the PLAN’s
ability is constantly growing as it gains more experience operating in distant
waters and acquires larger and more advanced technologies. The US will remain a
dominant force in the coming decades, but Chinese successes cannot be
underestimated.
Chinese naval successes, reflected in the recent congressional report,
add to growing American fears that China might become a global competitor.
Indeed, from the US perspective, what the Chinese are doing in Eurasia through
its pivotal One Belt, One Road initiative, and various moves to influence
Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan, is geopolitically important. From the US perspective,
the Chinese are doing exactly what the Americans have been opposed to –
solidifying one-country rule in Eurasia.
By Emil Avdaliani This article was
published at Georgia Today.
One thought on “China’s Grand Strategy – OpEd”
The writer is correct in China’s altered mindset in her national defense
and offense operations on land and sea. However, as China was geographically
isolated in the past up to the Russian and British penetrations on land and sea
against China since the 17th century, and the over one hundred years of
European, American and Japanese invasions, defeats and occupations for over one
hundred years: China’s national mindset is totally different from the old
inward looking, passive, non aggressive and non expansive thinking of the past.
China today is a forward looking, combative, expansive, outward looking,
innovative and with a formidable desire to catch up and surpass Europe and her
descendants, including USA. As we all know in history there is no free lunch,
all past arrangements by the superior powers will be redefined and rearranged
by the on going power shifts, which goes on non stop indefinitely. China will
not only challenge America in all areas and will certainly do all possible to
surpass her. If one really studied Sun Tze’s Art of War well, one should
without a doubt understand the principal of power shift as Sun Tze stated:
“Water flows from higher level to lower levels, such as all superior powers
attacks weaker powers and overtake them.” This is what China is aiming to do
for the next few centuries with the non stop power shifts continues non stop
indefinitely in our future. Siao Liu
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