Walden Bello
– La maggiore aggressività delle rivendicazioni territoriali cinesi, il ri-focalizzazone strategica americana sull’Asia, e le pressioni della destra giapponese su una nuova politica estera e militare stanno creando una situazione di instabilità nell’Asia-Pacifico, da alcuni paragonata a quella della bilancia di potenza dell’Europa fine XIX sec., sfociata nella Prima guerra mondiale.
– occupazione del Scarborough Shoal (Banco di Scarborough), o Majo de Masinloc, con 90 navi, che impediscono l’accesso ai pescatori filippini;
– una maggiore presenza militare nell’Ayungin Shoal;
– la cosiddetta Cabbage Strategy (Strategia del cavolo), circondare militarmente con le navi le due suddette aree, per impedire qualsiasi rifornimento, alimentare e militare, ai distaccamenti filippini.
– La Cina è da tempo interessata alla ricca pesca e alle riserve di petrolio e gas dell’area, ma la motivazione strategica è farsi riconoscere come potenza regionale egemone dai paesi della regione.
La Cina rivendica un’area marittima di 3,5 milioni di km2 confinante con sei Stati, attraverso la quale passa 1/3 del traffico marino mondiale, definendola in modo non ufficiale una via d’acqua di sua antica proprietà, e riferendosi alla sua inclusione nelle mappe del regime nazionalista cinese, a fine anni Quaranta. Un anno fa la Cina ha creato Sansha City per amministrare tutto il mar occidentale delle Filippine, le sue isole e porzioni della terra ferma. Si tratta secondo gli analisti di uno dei maggiori furti territoriali della storia.
Due le teorie per spiegare le ragioni del comportamento cinese:
– 1. Il PCC risponde con un forte nazionalismo allo scontento interno, derivante dalla crisi finanziaria internazionale, non potendo affidarsi sulla sicurezza della crescita economica.
– 2. Freddo calcolo: acquisire il monopolio delle risorse energetiche e della pesca, in quanto potenza in ascesa che aspira a divenire una potenza egemone regionale e poi globale.
– Le manovre cinesi sono state usate dagli Usa come giustificazione per accrescere la propria presenza militare nella regione, e presentarsi come necessario difensore dei paesi minori contro le pretese egemoniche cinesi.
– Il 60% della forza navale americana è stata spostata nel Pacifico Occidentale, con un maggior dispiegamento di gruppi della marina da Okinawa a Guam ed Australia.
– Le forze speciali americane continuano a partecipare alla campagna contro i radicali islamisti nelle Filippine meridionali, e conducono esercitazioni militari congiunte nei pressi delle disputate Spratly Islands e Scarborough Shoal.
– A 20 anni dalla rinuncia alle proprie basi militari nelle Filippine, gli Usa ora tornano con un maggior accesso alle basi navali del paese.
– La concentrazione sull’Asia (“pivot”) di Obama, riprende la strategia militare di Bush ante 11 settembre che definì la Cina non più partner strategico ma competitore strategico, con la differenza che quella di Obama sarebbe un limitato ripiegamento dalle difficoltà dell’intervento americano in MO e Asia sudoccidentale, in un’area considerata di più facile gestione.
– Allarmati dalla nuova aggressività cinese, tramite ASEAN, i paesi dell’area hanno ricordato alla Cina l’impegno preso nel 2002 nella Dichiarazione di comportamento ad assicurare la risoluzione pacifica delle dispute.
– C’è il rischio che Pechino spinga questi paesi, Vietnam compreso, nelle braccia di Washington, protettore militare o fattore di equilibrio.
– Con l’obiettivo di una politica estera e militare più indipendente dagli Usa,
– la destra giapponese, compreso il primo ministro Shinzo Abe, ha sfruttato le manovre cinesi nel mar occidentale delle Filippine e della disputa giapponese con la Cina sulle isole Sensaku per far pressione per l’abolizione dell’art. 9 della Costituzione che proibisce la guerra come strumento di politica estera e che il Giappone abbia delle forze armate.
Ci sono segnali della minore resistenza alla ri-militarizzazione giapponese, dal ministro Esteri delle Filippine, che ha appoggiato di recente il riarmo giapponese per contenere le mire egemoniche della Cina.
A brewing storm in the Western Pacific
By Walden Bello
A storm is brewing in the Western Pacific. As the Asia-Pacific region descends into a period of destabilizing conflict, the Philippines is quickly becoming a frontline state in the US strategy to contain China – the central thrust of the Obama administration’s so-called "Pivot to Asia". In the most recent development, the Philippine government has offered the United States greater access to its military bases.
– China’s controversial moves in the Western Pacific have served as a convenient excuse for heightened US military presence in the region. In particular, Beijing’s claim of the whole South China Sea (including the West Philippine Sea) as Chinese territory has allowed the United States to portray itself as indispensable for protecting the region’s smaller countries from Chinese hegemony. A one-time US colony and ally, the Philippine government has been especially receptive to Washington’s siren call.
July 24 marks the first anniversary of Beijing’s creation of "Sansha City" to "administer" the whole West Philippine Sea and the islands and terrestrial features it claims. Among these are the Spratly Islands, nine of which are claimed and occupied by the Philippines, along with Scarborough Shoal, Ayungin Shoal, Panganiban Reef, and Recto Bank, all of which are claimed by the Philippines.
– The last few months have seen a series of provocative Chinese moves. These include the occupation of Scarborough Shoal, or Bajo de Masinloc, by up to 90 Chinese ships, which have barred Filipino fishers from the area;
– an increased Chinese military presence at Ayungin Shoal;
– and a Chinese general’s brazen presentation of the so-called "Cabbage Strategy". The thrust of the Cabbage Strategy, Major General Zhang Zhaozhong explained, was to surround Bajo de Masinloc, Ayungin Shoal, and other Philippine territories with a massive Chinese naval presence to starve Filipino detachments and prevent reinforcements from reaching them.
The nine-dash line maritime grab
– What China adduces as a legal basis for its aggressive moves is a note verbale that Beijing submitted to the United Nations on May 7, 2009. It unilaterally asserted China’s "indisputable sovereignty" over all the islands in the West Philippine Sea and their "adjacent waters/relevant waters".
– Accompanying the note was the infamous "nine-dash line" map demarcating China’s claims in the region. No official explanation for the nine-dash line was provided at that time or since, though there have been unofficial references to the islands and waters of the West Philippine Sea being ancestral Chinese territories, and to their inclusion in maps of the defunct Nationalist Chinese regime that date back to the late 1940s.
Among the brazen claims of the nine-dash line document is that the nine Spratly Islands and terrestrial features that have long been a municipality of Palawan, a province of the Philippines, belong to China. The Kalayaan Island group is about 370 kilometers from Palawan and some 1,609 kilometers from China. A clear implication is that the Bajo de Masinloc, which is 137 kilometers from the province of Zambales and is an integral part of it, also belongs to China, which is 700 kilometers away.
Yet another assertion is that the Philippines, and the four other claimants to all or part of the to South China Sea (Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan, and Vietnam), are not entitled to their 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zones (EEZs) under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), since the whole area falls under China’s "indisputable sovereignty". What most of the other claimants are left with are only the territorial waters that extend 12 nautical miles from their respective coasts.
– But the South China Sea disputes go beyond the interests of the six claimant countries. For what China is saying with its nine-dash line is that a body of water that is 3.5 million square kilometers in size – which borders six states, and through which transits one third of the world’s shipping – is the equivalent of a domestic waterway like Lake Michigan in the United States. If allowed to stand, many analysts conclude that the nine-dash line claim will amount to one of the greatest maritime grabs in history.
China’s motives
– China’s interest in the rich fisheries and oil and gas reserves of the South China Sea is longstanding. Its behavior, however, has grown more aggressive recently.
– There are two theories about the mainsprings of Chinese behavior. The first says it stems from insecurity. China’s increasingly aggressive stance stems less from expansionist intent than from the insecurities brought about by high-speed growth followed by economic crisis. Long dependent for its legitimacy on delivering economic growth, China has recently experienced domestic troubles related to the global financial crisis that have left the Communist Party leadership groping for a new ideological justification. It has found this in virulent nationalism.
– The second theory is that China’s moves reflect the cold calculation of a confidently rising power. It aims to stake out a monopoly over the fishing and energy resources of the West Philippine Sea in its bid to become a regional, and later a global, hegemon.
– But whatever the source of its provocative posture, Beijing’s moves have alarmed its neighbors. At the meeting of its foreign ministers at the end of June, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) reminded China of its "collective commitment under the [2002] Declaration of Conduct [of Parties] to ensuring the resolution of disputes by peaceful means in accordance with universally recognized principles of international law, including the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, without resorting to the threat or use of force, while exercising self-restraint in the conduct of activities."
– But more disturbing is the fact that Beijing may be forcing them, including Washington’s former enemy Vietnam, into the hands of the of the United States by allowing Washington to portray itself as a military savior or "balancer" to Beijing. If China feels threatened by the closer military relations the United States is developing with its neighbors, it largely has itself to blame.
– Obama’s so-called Pivot to Asia is not novel. It is simply a return to the pre-9/11 global military posture of the George W Bush administration, which redefined China from being a "strategic partner" to a "strategic competitor".
– The "Contain China" strategy was put on hold after 9/11, owing to Washington’s drive to win allies for its "War on Terror". But while it is not new, there is an urgency to the containment strategy under Obama owing to developments in the intervening decade. To many analysts, the Pivot actually represents a retreat from the comprehensive global military dominance that the neoconservative faction of the US ruling class attempted under Bush. It is a feint, a maneuver designed to serve as a cover for a limited retreat from America’s disastrous intervention in the Middle East and Southwest Asia. It is an attempt by Washington to retreat to an area for imperial power projection that it sees as more manageable than a Middle East that is running out of control.
To be sure, the Western Pacific has always been an American lake. At its height in the post-World War II era, the US presence amounted to that of a transnational garrison state spanning seven countries and political entities in the Western Pacific and Australia.
– Nevertheless, the Pacific Pivot has intensified the already intense militarization of the area. Sixty percent of US naval strength has been shifted to the Western Pacific. This has been accompanied by the accelerated deployment of US Marine Corps units from Okinawa to Guam and Australia. US Special Forces continue to participate in the campaign against radical Islamists in the Southern Philippines, while conducting amphibious and naval exercises with Philippine military units near the disputed Spratly Islands and Scarborough Shoal. The most recent development is that the Philippine government will allow greater US access to Philippine bases, including the former massive US naval complex at Subic Bay. Twenty years after giving up its bases in the country, the United States is back with a bang in the Philippines.
The US build-up in the Philippines, some Filipino commentators have pointed out, is self-defeating, since the dynamics of conflict between the superpowers have set in, marginalizing any effective resolution to the territorial disputes that Washington’s military presence was supposed to facilitate in the first place.
Tokyo’s opportunism
– US-China sparring is worrisome enough, but there is a third source of destabilization in the region: Japan. Right-wing elements there, including the current Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, have taken advantage of China’s moves in the West Philippine Sea and Japan’s dispute with Beijing over the deserted Senkaku Islands to push for the abolition of Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, which prohibits war as an instrument of foreign policy and prevents Japan from having an army.
– The aim is to have a foreign and military policy more independent from the United States, which has managed Tokyo’s external security affairs ever since Japan’s defeat during World War II.
Many of Japan’s neighbors are convinced that a Japan more independent from the United States will develop nuclear weapons. They fear the prospect of a nuclear-armed Japan that has shed its post-war pacifism and not yet carried out the national soul searching that in Germany embedded responsibility for the atrocities of the Nazi regime in the national consciousness.
– This failure to institutionalize and internalize war guilt is what allowed the mayor of Osaka, Toru Hashimoto, to assert recently that the estimated 200,000 Korean, Chinese, and Filipino "comfort women" – women captured into sexual slavery by Japanese troops in World War II – were "necessary" for troop morale.
– The Osaka mayor’s remarks came in the wake of another scandal: a mass visit in April by some 170 sitting legislators and members of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s cabinet to the Yasukuni Shrine, the home of Japan’s war dead, which includes among its honorees 14 convicted war criminals.
– Japan’s neighbors have long condemned the ritual visit of Japanese leaders to Yasukuni as a sign of the country’s unrepentant attitude for its conduct during World War II. Yet there are disturbing signs that long held stances toward Japan’s remilitarization are softening. The Foreign Secretary of the Philippines, Albert del Rosario, for instance, has gone on record recently to support Japanese rearmament in order to contain China’s hegemonic behavior.
– China’s aggressive territorial claims, Washington’s "pivot," and Japan’s opportunistic moves add up to a volatile brew. Many observers note that the Asia Pacific military-political situation is becoming like that of Europe at the end of the 19th century, with the emergence of a similar configuration of balance of power politics. It is a useful reminder that while that fragile balancing might have worked for a time, it eventually ended up in the conflagration that was World War I.
Foreign Policy In Focus columnist Walden Bello has written extensively on developments in the Asia Pacific region.
(Posted with permission Foreign Policy in Focus)