China’s Maritime Silk Road Strategically Impacts
Indo-Pacifc Security – Analysis
China’s
Maritime Silk Road projects underway in the last two years emerges as a direct
strategic and military challenge to the Indo Pacific Security Template adopted
by the United States, India and Japan as it aims to establish a China-dominated
maritime grid spanning the maritime global commons of the South China Sea and
the Indian Ocean region.
Security and stability in the South
China Sea and the Indian Ocean Region are essential imperatives for the overall
security and stability of the vast Indo Pacific Region spanning the Western
Pacific and encompassing the Western Indian Ocean. China has already been
successful in converting the South China Sea into a regional and global flashpoint
and now by its attempts for an intrusive presence in the Indian Ocean is likely
to generate similar ‘flashpoint contours’.
The United States and India along
with Japan and Australia have legitimate security stakes in ensuring the
freedom of navigation and unimpeded access in the global commons that
constitute the vast maritime expanses of the South China Sea and the Indian
Ocean. Strategic convergences which flow from this strategic convergence should
bind the United States, India, Japan and Australia to band together and ensure
that the ‘freedom of the high seas’ is ensured.
China’s Maritime Silk Road
enterprise is not an economic response but a strategic and military response to
the United States ‘Strategic Pivot to Asia Pacific’ and India’s ‘Look East
Policy’ assuming more proactive contours as ‘Act East Policy’ incorporating
Indian Navy presence in the South China Sea and Western Pacific. China if it
was a responsible member of group of Major Global Powers should have
collaborated with them in maintaining security and stability in the South China
Sea and the Indian Ocean. Regrettably, its demonstrated track record was the
opposite and hence invited countermeasures.
China forgets that the
above-mentioned strategic responses by the United States and India and which
find equal resonance with Japan and Australia were the logical responses to
China’s not so benign military rise and China’s aims to evict the United States
from the Western Pacific and a double encirclement of India both in the
Himalayan Borders in the North and open a new maritime flank in the South in
the Indian Ocean.
In an overall calibrated maritime
strategy China commenced its opening moves in the South China Sea in the
closing years of the last decade and is now assiduously engaged in challenging
the status quo in the Indian Ocean Region. China’s track record in illegal
military occupation of the South China Sea by aggressive military brinkmanship
and over-militarisation there has put the Major Global Powers on notice in
terms of China’s real strategic intentions.
China’s ‘Full Spectrum Dominance’ of
the South China Sea not only endangers the survival of US Allies in the region
like Japan and South Korea but also of Vietnam and the Philippines which have
suffered unprovoked Chinese aggression in the form of their island territories
being forcibly occupied and transformed into fortified Chinese military bases.
China’s intrusive naval presence in
the Indian Ocean commenced with its participation in international naval
patrols in the Gulf of Aden to prevent Somali piracy. Soon under cover of these
naval patrols China added prowling of the Indian Ocean in the Arabian Sea
segment of Chinese nuclear submarines. Surely, Chinese nuclear submarines were
not required to fight Somali pirates.
China also displays double standards
in terms of designation of the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. China
scoffs at any attempts to rename the South China Sea as it denotes China’s sovereignty
over this international waterway but has no qualms in making demands that the
Indian Ocean be renamed as presumably there is no ‘Chinese Ocean’.
With Chinese naval ambitions clear
in terms of its strategy to dominate the Indian Ocean in much the same way as
it has perpetrated in the South China Sea alarm bells should be ringing
primarily in Washington and in New Delhi, bedsides Western Europe and Asian
capitals.
China’s Maritime Silk Road blueprint
poses a bigger strategic challenge to Indo Pacific Security when to its
maritime grid are added the North-South Belt & Road strategic feeders like
the China Pakistan Economic Corridor and China’s push for a parallel Corridor
emanating from Yunnan and traversing the length of Myanmar. These corridors are
duplicitously termed as Economic Corridors aimed at economic development of the
host countries but in actual effect they are Strategic Highways giving China
access to the Indian Ocean through the North Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal.
China’s Maritime Silk Road project
is intended to add flesh and substance to China’s global maritime ambitions as
enshrined in China’s Maritime Strategy Doctrine unveiled in 2015. China
realised that China devoid of China’s naval presence in ‘Distant Seas’ can
never aspire to demand the recognition and respect of being a Global Power.
China’s burning ambition to emerge
as a Global Power and seek ‘Strategic Equivalence’ with the United States stand
discussed in Chapters 12 to 14 of my Book: ‘China-India Military Confrontation:
21st Century Perspectives (2016)
China adopting the old colonial
British practise of global naval presence via the establishment of logistics
refuelling stations at strategic naval locations and control of strategic choke
points initially put into place its naval strategy of ‘String of Pearls’ which
the Indian strategic community viewed it as the encirclement of India.
Strategic encirclement of India it was but China had a larger strategic design
in the initial stages itself.
China’s long term strategic thinking
surpasses those of United States and India and this can be gleaned from a
documented fact that China soon after 1949 initiated preparatory moves for
China acquiring nuclear submarines despite the fact that at that stage China
had not even mastered the intricacies of producing a nuclear bomb. It is with
such a background that the United States, India, Japan and West European
countries should at this stage be wide awake to the long-term Chinese strategic
naval ambitions.
Emphasis is not required to highlight
how critical it is that the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean which will see
the main traverse of China’s Maritime Silk Road remain as free global commons
permitting free flow of maritime trade and traffic unimpeded by controls sought
to be established like China has attempted to impose in the South China Sea.
How the major powers like the United States. India and Japan should proceed
ahead in this direction will be discussed later on in this Paper. But first, a
few notable observations need to be made.
China’s Maritime Silk Road has not
drawn any notable support from any advanced major Powers whose trade and
commerce use the sea-lanes that pass through these maritime expanses. India
stands out so far as the notable abstention in lending its support to the China
Maritime Silk Road and also the China Pakistan Economic Corridor. Indian PM
Modi even at international meets in China has refused to budge from India’s
refusal as this has severe strategic implications for India,
India should never lend its support
to China’s such encircling projects despite any political overtures from China.
The second notable point is that
economically viable and strong Asian nations along the maritime and land routes
of China’s so-called economic development routes have joined China’s One Belt
One Road projects. Asian nations like Pakistan, Myanmar, Maldives and Sri Lanka
have been exploited by China with massive investments for associated
infrastructure but at exorbitant interest rates pulling these countries into
severe ‘Debt Traps’ converting these countries into Chinese colonial entities
like Pakistan.
China’s establishment of a naval
base at Djibouti is a case in point as to the evolving and expanding blueprint
of Chinse Maritime Strategy.
China’s access and investments in
these ports like Gwadur in Pakistan, Hambantota in Sri Lanka and in Maldives
facilitate use of such ports as logistics support staging points for the
Chinese Navy to expand its naval sway over these maritime expanses. With
passage of time and these host nations drowning further into the Chinese ‘Debt
Trap’ Chinese demands for berthing of Chinese Navy ships and nuclear submarines
would be an expected demand.
Another point of note in relation to
the Chinese Maritime Silk Road geographical configuration has been enlarging by
the day with China enticing more and more economically weak nations into its
fold.
Moving to the strategic implications
of China’s Maritime Silk Road on the security and stability of the Indo Pacific
let us first begin briefly with the impact on the United States which is not
only even now as the sole Superpower straddling the globe but also has vital
geopolitical and geostrategic stakes in the Western Pacific more pointedly.
China’s associated moves in the Western
Pacific impacting the United States stand analysed in a number of my SAAG
Papers in the past. Suffice it to state that China has tried to achieve
multiple strategic objectives by illegal military occupation of the South China
Sea and ensuring ‘Full Spectrum Dominance’ militarily. China has manged to
limit US Air-Sea Doctrine of close-in military interventions against China.
China has achieved the military capability for initial impeding of US Navy
transference of its Fleets from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean and vice
versa. China is in a position to strangulate Japanese and South Korean
economies. Lastly, this puts in place an overall cumulative Chinese strategy of
prompting the United States to make a military exit from the Western Pacific.
The impact on India of this Chinese
strategy encompasses a much wider strategic field because China is in direct
military confrontation with India along India’s Northern Borders with China
Occupied Tibet. With India no military pushover for China there is a need for
China to open another front against India on its Southern Flank, namely the
Indian Ocean. China’s intrusive and expanding naval presence in the Indian
Ocean facilitated by Pakistan’s complicity and reinforced by China’s CPEC
project is in effect turning the Western Flanks of India’s security.
China is more strategically
concerned that the Indian Ocean unlike India’s Himalayan Frontiers is one area
where India finds strong support from the United States, Japan, and Australia
and West European countries in terms of strategic convergences. Al these
countries support India’s efforts to ensure that the Indian Ocean does not get
transformed into a maritime expanse where China succeeds in establishing naval
dominance. This strategic convergence that India enjoys of Global Major Powers
is extremely galling for China. Chapter 7 of my Book referred above examines
ths aspect in detail.
This enrages China even more when it
is considered that China has not been able to muster support from any leading
Major Powers around the globe. Obviously, these Powers are fully aware that
China’s stated motives for the Maritime Silk Road do not match China’s
underlying strategic intentions as borne out by China’s demonstrated record in
the South China Sea.
The crucial question that next
arises is if Indo Pacific Security is in danger of being adversely impacted by
China’s grandiose designs of spreading its tentacles both on the High Seas and
on the Central Asian landmass, then what logical steps can the United States,
India and Japan and Australia can undertake to checkmate China?
With Russia acquiescing with China’s
military adventurism camouflaged in economic terms simply because it pits China
against the United States—-a ‘No Cost Low Risk’ option for Russia, no
assistance can be expected from Russia even when China is muscling into Russian
turf in the Central Asian Republics.
Strong imperatives therefore exist
for the United States,, India, Japan and Australia besides other Asian nations
on China’s peripheries to cooperate intensely to ensure that both the South
China Sea and the Indian Ocean are kept free from any sort of Chinese-generated
turbulence or disruptive activities. It also implies that China’s propensity to
exploit the economic weaknesses of smaller nations in the region is not allowed
to fructify. Capacity –building of such nations both in the economic spheres ad
the military realm would be a priority.
The China Threat to peace and
stability in the Indo Pacific Region manifesting itself in China’s aggressive
moves in the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean requires a strong combination
of geopolitical, military and economic responses by the United States, India,
Japan and Australia as the relatively more powerful nations. These responses
need to be coordinated and integrated for a powerful cumulative deterrence.
The Quadrilateral Initiative amongst
these four countries is one excellent move which combines the geopolitical,
military and economic strengths of the United States, India, Japan and
Australia. In this grouping India has been diffident weighed down by Indian
policy establishment’s deference to China’s sensitivities. This should be
immediately dispensed with as correspondingly China has never respected India’s
strategic sensitivities.
The United States and Japan are
engaged in FONOPS Naval patrols in the South China Sea and West European
countries and Australia are soon to join in. India does maintain a rotational
naval presence in these waters but it is held back from joining in Joint Naval
Patrolling. Perhaps here too India’s diffidence because of the Chinese Factor
overhang, India could join in if the United Nations takes a lead in organising
international patrolling of the South China Sea.
Repeated many times in my past
writings is the simple fact that India cannot maintain the Indian Ocean as
“Indian” within its own naval capabilities. India needs the United States,
Japan and Australian Navies besides those of France and UK to ensure that the
Indian Ocean is kept free of China’s domination strategies.
While the United States has put into
operation geopolitical and military moves to cater for the emerging China
Threat in international maritime expanses of the Indo Pacific, India is yet to
be fully seized with proactively responding to the Chinese naval threat on its
Southern Flank. India leads long lead times to build up her military strengths
dissipated by India’s neglect of the nation’s ‘War Preparedness’ by the
previous ruling dispensation. India also stands mistakenly deceived by China’s
spasmodic political reachout to India confusing India’s responses.
In Conclusion, I would like to
emphasise that India as the pivot in the Indo Pacific Security Template led by
the United States needs to be alive to playing its pivotal role to the hilt.
Playing a pivotal role expected from her by the United States and India’s other
Asian strategic partners involve a necessary dispensing of India’s strategic
diffidence in coming to grip s squarely with threats to Indo Pacific Security.
Needless to state, that India is more affected by emerging threats. And, the
last point in conclusion is that India does not lose her ‘strategic autonomy’
by strategic partnering against emerging threats.
By SAAG
By Dr Subhash Kapila
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