Conquering the South China Sea
The U.S. dawdles as China extends
its maritime domination.
From the Wall Street Journal
China is building military bases on
artificial islands hundreds of miles off its coast, in waters claimed by six
other countries. These new fortresses in the South China Sea raise the risk of
war, yet Washington seems to have no strategy to address them. Are the U.S. and
its allies ceding the nearly 1.35 million square miles claimed by China without
legal merit, including some of the busiest sea lanes on the planet?
Over the past year Chinese dredging
and other landfill techniques have transformed tiny reefs into potential homes
for military aircraft, ships, radar facilities and other assets. Formerly
underwater during high tide, Johnson Reef is now a 25-acre landmass. Nearby
Hughes Reef has grown big enough to host two piers and a cement plant. Gaven
Reef is now 28 acres, with a helipad and antiaircraft tower. Fiery Cross Reef
has grown 11-fold since August, with what appears to be a three-kilometer
airstrip under construction. All are part of the Spratly islands, a cluster of
rocks between the Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam, often some 650 miles from
China.
U.S. Senators John
McCain, Jack Reed, Bob
Corker and Bob Menendez last week wrote a bipartisan letter asking
Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Secretary of State John
Kerry not to overlook China’s behavior. At stake, the Senators note,
is the security of U.S. allies in Asia, the continued free flow of $5 trillion
a year in oil, iPhones and other trade through the South China Sea, and the
principle of “peaceful resolution of disputes.”
U.S. executive officials have done
little more than politely ask Beijing to stop, citing a 2002 pledge by China
and its neighbors to avoid provocative actions. Some in Washington don’t even
see a problem. Former Obama Pentagon official Shawn Brimley has quoted an
unnamed former colleague dismissing China’s Spratly fortresses as “a bunch of
easy targets that would be taken out within minutes of a real contingency.”
That is hardly comforting since the purpose of the bases is to change the
status quo during peacetime.
The Senate letter asks the
Administration to report on “specific actions the United States can take to
slow down or stop China’s reclamation activities.” It further suggests
publicizing relevant intelligence more regularly, calibrating U.S.-China
security cooperation to encourage better Chinese behavior, and deepening U.S.
partnerships across Asia.
However, U.S. defense cuts and a
general impression of American retreat don’t inspire confidence. Asian states
know they have to live next to China, so they hesitate to resist Chinese
ambitions unless they feel Washington is a reliable partner.
The U.S. would help security in Asia
if it began imposing costs on Chinese aggression. That would require accepting
greater risk in U.S.-Chinese relations, but the alternative is watching China
continue what it intends to be a gradual march to domination of the Western
Pacific.
Washington could start by expanding
training for the threats posed in the South China Sea, where China uses
military, coast guard and civilian vessels to challenge others (such as the
Philippine marines on Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratlys) and extend its
military and economic reach (as with the oil rig it planted in Vietnamese waters
last year). The U.S. could also jointly patrol the area with forces from the
Philippines, Japan or other willing partners. Trying to work through the
10-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations is probably futile.
The U.S. could also invite Taiwanese
participation in the next Rim of the Pacific naval exercise set for 2016. China
earned its first invitation in 2014, despite its adversarial record, while
Taiwan was left out. Washington could also finally sell Taiwan upgraded F-16
fighter jets and help it field modern submarines, something first promised in
2001.
“The United States has a national
interest in freedom of navigation, open access to Asia’s maritime commons and
respect for international law in the South China Sea,” Hillary Clinton said in 2010. Five years later
China is imposing its will more forcefully than ever. The U.S. and its partners
may not have another five years to dawdle.
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