So many secrets in the East China Sea
By Pepe Escobar
Dec 10, '13
It's been a source of endless fascination to follow the game of geopolitical Go
being played since China declared an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) in
the East China Sea.
The spin in the United States is relentless; this was no less than
"saber-rattling", a "bellicose" posture and a unilateral "provocation". The
meeting last week between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US Vice-President Joe
Biden in Beijing may have done nothing to dispel it.
This is
what the White House says Xi and Biden talked about; Beijing did not release a
transcript. In the hysteria front, this
op-edin the Financial Times - reflecting a warped consensus in the
City of London - even managed to crank it up to pre-World War II levels.
Now compare it with the official Chinese media view, from a more conciliatory
take in
China Daily to a no-holds barred assertion of sovereignty in the in
the Global Times.
Which brings us to the scenario that the original provocation may have been
actually Japanese, and not Chinese.
Mr Xi, tear down this wall
The whole drama is far from being just about a few islets and rocks that China
calls Diaoyu and Japan Senkaku, or the crucial access to the precious waters
that surround them, harboring untold riches in oil and natural gas; it concerns
no less than the future of China as a sea power rivaling the US.
Let's start with the facts on the sea. Meiji-era documents prove without a
doubt that the Japanese government not only admitted that these islands were
Chinese (since at least the 16th century) but was also plotting to grab them;
that's exactly what happened in 1895, during the first Sino-Japanese war, a
historical juncture when China was extremely vulnerable.
After the Japanese occupation of China and World War II, Washington was in
control of the territory. A document signed by the Japanese promised the return
of the islands to China after the war. It was never fulfilled. In 1972, the US
handed over their "administration" to Japan - but without pronouncing itself
about who owned them. A gentlemen's agreement between Chinese premier Zhou Enlai
and Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka was also in effect. It was also
ignored.
Tokyo ended up buying the islands from a private landowner, the Kurihara
family, nationalizing them in September 2012 only a day after a summit between
then Chinese President Hu Jintao and PM Yoshihiko Noda, and this after Hu had
told Noda not to change the status quo.
Recently, to make matters worse, the Obama administration issued yet one more
of its absurd "red lines", affirming it would support Japan in the event of a
war revolving around the islands.
Geostrategically, it's even more complex. Virtually all of China's sea trade
flows through choke points whose borders are either controlled by close US
allies or nations that are not exactly allied with China.
Imagine yourself as a Chinese naval strategist. You look at the seascapes
around you and all you see is what strategists call the First Island Chain. That
virtual arc goes from Japan and the Ryukyu islands and the Korean peninsula, in
the north, moving southwards via Taiwan, Philippines and Indonesia towards
Australia. It's your ultimate nightmare. Assuming any serious confrontation
along this arc, the US Navy will be able to move its aircraft carriers around
and seriously compromise China's access to its oil transported via the straits
of Malacca.
Territorial disputes are the norm in the East and South China Seas. In the East
China Sea the focus is on the Diaoyu/Senkaku. In the South China Sea it's the
Spratly Islands (China opposed to Taiwan, the Philippines and Vietnam) and the
Paracel islands (China opposed to Vietnam). Not to mention other disputes now on
the backburner with Malaysia and Brunei.
So from the point of view of our Chinese naval strategist, what is deployed is
a sort of Reverse Great Wall, an expression, by the way, immensely popular in
circles such as the US Naval War College. It's like an invisible sea wall from
Japan to Australia that can in theory block China's access to the Pacific.
And if - and that's a major, long-term if - there ever would be a US blockade,
with its sea trade lanes closed, the Chinese economy would be in tremendous
trouble.
They know it in Beijing, and they are wiling to do anything to prevent it.
In search of good PR
What Biden, not to mention US corporate media, is not telling world public
opinion is how, for Washington, this has a lot to do with Okinawa - the key hub
from which the US is capable of projecting power west of Japan. It's as if
Okinawa was the US's Hadrian's wall.
In reverse, Okinawa is also essential for Japan to remain indispensable to the
US. It's as if Tokyo was employing the Pentagon as mercenaries - as much as the
Pentagon uses mercenaries in its global shadow wars. Talk about a low cost/high
return business model. Japan thus keeps its defense spending at 1% of GDP (yet
it's now rising while
for most countries this may be at 3% or more.
Were Beijing to actually enforce for good its aerial jurisdiction around the
Diayou islands, that would be the beginning of the breach of this aquatic
Hadrian's wall. For the moment, though, ADIZ is a message to Washington, part of
the much-vauntedxinxing daguo guanxi - the "New Type of Great Power
Relations" being implemented slowly but surely by President Xi Jinping.
Beijing may be right on principle and certainly does want to create facts on
the sea. What happened was essentially a PR disaster - an inability convincingly
to "sell" the ADIZ to world public opinion. Absolutely nothing will convince any
Chinese administration that this is not about Japan encroaching upon a territory
and sphere of sovereignty that have been Chinese for centuries.
Instead of the usual ritualistic pilgrimages to revere "heroes" in shrines
accused of committing hair-raising massacres, Tokyo could easily defuse the
problem by admitting to its appalling imperial adventures in Asia. Tokyo could
also redefine its role in Asia by behaving like an Asian power - and not some
obedient Western appendix, as it's perceived by millions across the continent,
and not only by the Chinese.
Ultimately, the only way to defuse the Diaoyu/Senkaku/ADIZ problem would be for
Beijing and Tokyo to sit at the table and work out a security treaty for these
East China Sea lanes - ideally arbitrated by the United Nations. The problem is
Tokyo simply does not admit there is a problem. Now Beijing's strategy is to
force the Japanese to do it. Perhaps Beijing should consider hiring an American
PR agency, like everyone does.
Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan:
How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble
Books, 2007), Red
Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge (Nimble Books,
2007), and Obama
does Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009).
He may be reached at pepeasia@yahoo.com.
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