by Pepe Escobar for RT
The Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague denied China’s historic rights to waters in the South China Sea within its nine-dash line; it also ruled that the Spratly Islands are not islands, but “rocks”; thus they cannot generate 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zones (EEZs).
These decisions were taken in accordance with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Now comes the real nitty-gritty – which is a mix of diplomatic ballet and classic Beijing opera.
The framework under which Beijing is ready to negotiate is somewhat detailed here. But the problem at the starting gate is that Beijing stipulates – as a precondition to any negotiation with the Philippines – that The Hague’s decision should not be discussed. Chinese nationalism has been deeply wounded in The Hague, and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) knows it will be very hard to tame it.
Manila for its part faces a constitutional problem. The Filipino constitution rules that the “state shall protect the nation’s marine wealth in its exclusive economic zone, and reserve its use and enjoyment exclusively to Filipino citizens.” It goes on to say that the state “may enter into co-production, joint venture, or production-sharing agreements with Filipino citizens, or corporations or associations,” but “at least 60 per cent of whose capital is owned by such citizens.” If President Duterte goes against this provision he may be impeached.
Enter the face-saving Asian way of doing business. A graphic example is already at hand; no one so far has urged China to remove people and/or installations from The Hague-coined “low-tide elevations” in the South China Sea.
In practice, Manila will use The Hague’s ruling as a sort of road map – while not insisting Beijing must recognize it. But that implies an extra obstacle: Beijing may still insist on Manila recognizing Chinese sovereignty over a selected bunch of “rocks”. Filipino diplomats actually hope this won’t be the case. If that happens, we’re in business.
The first step in the negotiation should be no sovereignty decision over those “rocks” – including the highly contentious Scarborough shoal. Just like what happened in the 1940s, when the then Republic of China came up with the “nine-dash line”, this should be decided in the future. In the short-term, a deal on fishing within the 12 nautical mile territorial sea around the shoal should be all but inevitable.
This means, in practice, that Beijing will not interfere with Filipino fishermen and/or Filipino oil exploration within its EEZ – while reducing its own workload in those “low-tide elevations”. That’s a tall order, but doable, because the payback will be increased business.
President Duterte knows as much as the Beijing leadership that China is absolutely essential to the development of Filipino infrastructure.
That will open the way to joint Chinese/Filipino
oil exploration. Of course, constitutionally it can’t be an equal share, but China can still get a very good deal in terms of production rights. Not to mention the deal can be expanded to international waters beyond those EEZs, involving other players such as Vietnam and Malaysia.
At the same time, China will not desist from building a first-class blue water navy with global reach. That’s the rationale for the sophisticated submarine base in Hainan Island and those ultra-controversial land reclamations in the Spratly Islands. Beijing’s overall strategy is to fully control security in the South China Sea – considering whatever the hegemon may come up with.
Beijing clearly sees what the US means by “freedom of navigation”; code for the US Navy being able to blockade China’s trade routes in the South China Sea, as I analyzed here. If the US Navy gets too close to China’s southern seaboard, a blockade could be devastating. After all, the whole strategy of setting up Chinese island – or “rock” – defenses in the South China Sea is to keep the US Navy as far away as possible. This is the real deal – much more than fuzzy claims of sovereignty.
And one thing is clear. If the Pentagon goes for the monkey business option, all hell will break loose. The RAND Corporation is already on freak out mode just because the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force flew the long-range strategic bomber H-6K over those “low-tide elevations”.
Watch the Greater Mekong
One thing is the real high-stakes game being played in the South China Sea. Another thing entirely is Southeast Asian economic integration, via the ASEAN Economic Community – which implies a central strategic role for ASEAN.
The key problem is a real disconnect between mainland and maritime ASEAN. The Philippines and Indonesia are very much focused on South China Sea issues. Cambodia, Laos, Thailand – but also Brunei – lean towards accommodation with China. The others tend to sit on the fence. And then there’s Vietnam as a pivot; with an interest in the South China Sea but not keen on antagonizing China – a next-door neighbor and major trade partner.
It’s mainland Southeast Asia, not maritime Southeast Asia that should be the key driver for regional development in the near future. Some figures tell the story. The Greater Mekong sub-region – which includes the southern Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Guangxi – has more than 400 million people with half of ASEAN’s GDP of $2.5 trillion. Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam bear a market of 250 million people and a GDP of $700 billion; even without Vietnam, that’s a GDP of around $500 billion and a market of 150 million people.
They are all expanding like crazy; the Mekong mainland is growing as much as six percent a year. That reminds me, as a comparison, of the early 1980s, when Vietnam was still dreaming of becoming an Asian tiger.
Expansion goes all over the place. The East-West economic corridor – promoted by the Japan-based Asian Development Bank (ADB) – goes from southern Myanmar through central and northwest Thailand and southern Laos all the way to Danang in Vietnam. The North-South corridor goes from Kunming in Yunnan, China to Bangkok and southern Thailand. The southern corridor goes from southern Myanmar to northeast Thailand, Cambodia and Vung Tau in southern Vietnam; road connections in this corridor, also promoted by the ADB, are still relatively incipient, but advancing fast.
Of course there are still myriad problems – related to road construction, border crossings, stifling bureaucracy, the language barrier, internet speed. But that’s the way of the future.
And all that action also ties in with China positioning itself as a de facto high-speed rail power in Southeast Asia. That happens to be a key plank of One Belt, One Road (OBOR); the Southeast Asian branches of the New Silk Roads. China Railway Group Limited (CREC) is very well positioned to build the Malaysia-Singapore high-speed rail, against Japanese and Korean competition.
The 417 kilometer high-speed rail – stretching between Yunnan province and Vientiane in Laos – is already being built, while the China-Thailand high-speed rail project is also back on track after a few bumps on the financial road. In practice, we’re talking about over 3,000 kilometers of high-speed rail from China’s Yunnan to Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore; the Southeast Asian stretch of the New Silk Roads, eventually connected to central China, Central Asia, Southwest Asia – and Europe.
So watch Southeast Asia. The whole show is not only about maritime Southeast Asia – which is a hostage of the complex, conflicting big power China-US relationship; quite a few key geopolitical implications will derive from the development push of the Greater Mekong sub-region – and the progressive integration of mainland Southeast Asia.
Prepare for possible ‘war on water’ over South China Sea tensions, Beijing tells citizens
https://www.rt.com/news/354454-china-sea-war-warning/
“The seriousness of the national security situation should be recognized, particularly when it comes to threats posed at sea, Chang said.
The Chinese military, law enforcement and citizens must be ready for mobilization in the event of a “people’s war at sea,” he added.
The general public should be educated about national defense issues because national sovereignty and territorial integrity are at risk, according to the minister.
On Tuesday, China’s Supreme Court issued a regulation reaffirming the jurisdiction of national courts over the country’s territory, including the 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ). It warned citizens and foreigners alike of criminal liability for violations such as illegal fishing or killing endangered wildlife in the zone.
“People’s courts will actively exercise jurisdiction over China’s territorial waters, support administrative departments to legally perform maritime management duties, equally protect the legal rights of Chinese and foreign parties involved and safeguard Chinese territorial sovereignty and maritime interests,” the regulation stated.
Any fishing boats refusing to leave Chinese waters or caught fishing illegally there more than once in a year are subject to a fine, while the crew could be given a prison term of up to one year.
Foreigners who feel their rights have been violated by the Chinese authorities are free to deliver their claims to Chinese courts, the ruling said.”
Foreigners feeling their rights have been violated may have a hard time finding someone to represent them, given what the Chinese courts are handing out these days.
Pepe is right on the button again.
With the right kind of infrastructure development China will undoubtably aim to further tie many ASEAN countries to ever closer economic interdependence with itself. Those who are also current US allies will find it ever harder to support a belligerent US position re the South China Sea – or anything other issue – given the ever increasing cost of upsetting Beijing. In another 100 years I’d be surprised if the US has any meaningful influence left in any country on the East Asian continent.
Over this timescale the Eurasian super economy may also begin to dwarf even the US itself. The only question is; will the US allow the inevitable without taking us all into WWIII over some “low-tide elevations”.
US may not exist as such by then.
Article not even close to reality!
It’s conveniently being ignored by the ASEAN nations there, since they recognize it for the fraud the decision was.
The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) failed at a weekend meeting in Laos to reach consensus on criticizing Beijing over Chinese claims of sovereignty over most of the South China Sea. Those claims were roundly rejected this month by an international tribunal.
In a joint communique released after a meeting in Vientiane of the ASEAN and Chinese foreign ministers on Sunday, ASEAN said the organization will “remain seriously concerned over recent and ongoing developments” in the South China Sea.
While China is not a member of the organization, it has close bilateral ties to ASEAN members and is part of an ASEAN 10 forum that includes China and the other diplomatic partners.
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/laos/asean-sides-with-beijing-07252016162500.html
It is also my thought that ASEAN have ignored the Hague arbitration so called ruling because it has no legal basis.
Being an arbitration court both parties have to voluntarily submit to having the case arbitrated.
Very little of the legalities of this scam in the alternative media.
Pepe has the facts on this topic almost perfectly correct.
The Hegemon has tried to draw Manila and Hanoi close, and to coerce Malaysia and Thailand but that has not how it is working out right now.
Even the change for the worse in cross-straits relations with Taiwan can’t budge Taipei to choose the US position when it comes to Chinese “rights”. Taiwan holds a stake of its own and with China mainland prosperity.
The US is on the wrong side of development and history. And it is on the wrong side of naval power. The Chinese missile technology is just too dangerous for the mighty US Navy to start something China can wreck with a few missiles.
The only naval power US has is in a naval war. I don’t see China waging that war.
The US would love to have China come at them, but already we see Putin and the Russian navy enter the scene to calm things down with joint exercises. Russia is a player deep in the heart of the zone. Based in Vietnam and porting in Singapore, Russia has flown its flag on the blue waters, deep and shallow of the South China Sea.
At some point Russian aircraft and missile defenses will be using some of the airfields China has built.
The US is late to the party. It tried the Hague. The issue is moot. You can’t win an arbitration when only one side participates. The case is bogus. Philippines knows it has won nothing. It must negotiate with calm and reason. It will get fishing and oil and gas in some shared bi-lateral arrangement. China wants to develop all the neighbors. It has the wealth and the technology to change all the poor to middle class. Those are customers for infrastructure and then export products. That’s the future through SE Asia.
A canal through Thailand is next. That will eliminate the US chokepoint of the Straits of Malacca.
Meanwhile, rail and roads and fiber optic will be the major connectivity of One Belt, One Road development.
My feeling is that China is too stingy and egoistic and will continue to run into problems with its neighbors.
Things advance with the speed of a high-speed train (many, actually):
“The leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Iran meet in Baku for a summit meeting on August 8…The leitmotif of the trilateral format between the three countries will be intra-regional transportation routes – a North-South energy corridor and a North-South transport corridor. India is an interested party to the proposed North-South Transport Corridor. Last month in Moscow India joined hands with the three countries to sign an agreement to open a North-South railway line in the Caucasus… The agreement envisages the link-up of the Indian railway system by ship with Iran and, thereupon, heading to European destinations via Azerbaijan and Russia”
http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/
“Teheran has decided to proceed with a major infrastructure project which will take perhaps a decade to complete—an inland canal linking the Caspian Sea to the Persian Gulf for the first time across Iran. Given Iran’s very mountainous topography, it is no simple dig. It will also be a big benefit for Russia and other nations along the Caspian Littoral as well as nicely fitting China’s One Belt, One Road infrastructure Great Project”.
http://journal-neo.org/2016/04/07/iran-links-to-eurasia-with-persian-canal/
Soon is Turkey’s turn to join the gravy train.
I am flattered, Pepe, that you read, and found noteworthy, my comment to Jeff Brown’s report on the China, Russia semi-alliance. It reassures me that, just sometimes, I do reach a little understanding of the “big picture” of geostrategic issues. My comments rarely elicit any responses. Without feedback, it is hard to judge whether making a comment was worth the effort or not. Clearly, this last one was. Thank you.
RE: “The 417 kilometer high-speed rail – stretching between Yunnan province and Vientiane in Laos – is already being built.” The High Speed Rail Terminal in the capital of Yunnan, Kunming, has been completed but is not in operation. The China high speed rail has some inherent problems; it’s built by a Chinese workforce that receive very low wages but know well the revenue the government gets from it. Also the high speed trains are prone to breakdowns, plus the ticket cost is more than 50% higher than flights, except on National Holidays when the whole country is on the move but they aren’t very often.
I am sorry to disappoint Pepe’s theory lovers but China just does not have the intelligentsia, often enough, to, literally, change a light bulb.
What people don’t understand is that China has a disposable workforce. That is to say pay them low, work them hard until they’ve had enough, they go out the backdoor because the front door has a queue a mile long who will do anything just to work on the high speed trains; round and round it goes, where it stops nobody knows.
China is a vast rabble who have only recently been able to afford cars since the end of the 10 year WTO period. Here, a car or a mobility machine equals power. There is only the disorder of masses and masses of people trying to assert themselves individually, and these are ones who are going to fight, they can’t even line up for a bus. They rush to the door fighting with each other to get a seat.
China’s own infrastructure is a shambles, when ever there is heavy rain the streets flood because the outlet drain is smaller than the inlet. They still haven’t figured that out after 5,000 years. They have no idea of levels, when it rains the water is every where. The toilets have down pipes of less than 2″ so you have to wipe your butt and put it in a wastebasket or the toilet blocks up. Chinese women have you to be given tampons!!! Here children are taught to crap on sidewalks. I kid you not; and whole country goes to sleep after lunch because that’s what they did in school, 12 years of meaningless school where passing an exam is the pen ultimate to give the family face. But if you fail you can pay. Now the big thing is there are colleges and universities for those that failed the University Entrance Exam, they just pay a lot more to get in the back door.
Recently Pepe said that Xi has $4 Trillion to spend on what ever he likes. How about spending it on a better living environment for the people.
What is Communist China? It’s not Communist, that’s for sure. Its the epitome of Capitalist dictatorship, not unlike the Tibetan system they “liberated”. The former Emperor system has been replaced with a Neo Emperor system as many Chinese will agree. Every where you go or live you are being observed and recorded. When you check in to any paid overnight accommodation you must registered with the Police, that goes for every one, not just visitors. To reside you must register your residence and provide a copy of your tenancy contract and a copy of the owener’s ID card within 72 hours to the local Police.
If you involved in any crimes, maybe just as an innocent bystander, and the Police are called every one connected, including passers by, will be arrested taken to the nearest Police Station and every one will have to pay to be released, every one. So Chinese are very reticent to involve police and petty crime is allowed to flourish. Just imagine being beaten and injured and some one attempted to steal off your person any thing the assailant could get and the Police were called and they took you and the assailant away and any one in the near vicinity and every one has to pay to be free again. The criminal maybe incarcerated but will be released upon paying the required amount of money thru a go between, a lawyer, to the judge. The case will be heard and acquitted. Such applies to every breach of any law or regulation, including murder and rape. That also applies to corporate crimes and environmental crimes.
How do I know all this? I have lived here for the past 14 years, including Hong Kong which is just the same but appears otherwise.
I am sorry folks, if you are looking to China for hope, I suggest you re-look at UN Agenda 21, or come to China and see for yourself. Perhaps China is the lesser of 2 evils, but don’t forget China’s Central Bank is Rothschilds’ controlled where as Russia threw them out. Maybe Putin can convince Xi to do likewise. Xi is the China Central Bank’s boy.
Russia/China’s newly announced “alliance” could only go ahead as the Central Bank’s ploy to get Russia.
Been to China. Didn’t see anything of what you are describing. Trains seemed smooth, quiet and on time. didn’t see anyone crapping in the streets. Hardly saw any police for that matter. you seem to be full of crap.
Been to China too. Haven’t seen crap on the streets (choking with cars) either.
You sure have invested a lot of time to complain about your experience in China.
How did managed to live and tolerate such a horrible place, for such a long, long time. What actually kept you there, is it money? Most people would not hang around for too long if he finds his environment uncomfortable let alone offensive.
For me personally, I would have to love the place to stay more than a year let alone for more than a decade. Strange indeed are some people.
Really crude, despicably racist, xenophobic cap removed — mod-hs. From a Western ubermensch caps removed … mod-hs at the prospect of a non-Western power rising to global dominance (oe possibly a revanchist Japanese fascist). A pretty honest manifestation of the hatred and racist contempt at work in Thanatopolis DC and its stooge satellites.
“AI” = Atlantic Integrationist ?
Western supremacist blog barfs appearing every once in a while on this blog might be good for “educational” purposes. Wonder if that is what AI finds wanting with regard to China’s intelligentsia.
“China is a vast rabble who have only recently been able to afford cars since the end of the 10 year WTO period.”
This reads like a beautiful re-hash of that middle class imbecile Catire of Venezuelan descent some time ago. His submission here was an incredibly dull, pathetic act of moaning and groaning about the “rabble” who, thanks to Chávez, had the nerve to pester his peace of mind by driving — yes! — Chinese motorbikes. Consequently, he left his native Venezuela for Canada, if my memory serves me right. A terrible loss to Venezuela, just like AI’s departure after fourteen years must have been to China. Exceptional folks don’t take lightly to ingratitude on the part of the rabble.
Was Canada warned? They would probably want to welcome him with a brass band and a duet by Arseny Yatseniuk and his twelve-year-old daughter who aspires to be the next Euro vision Song Contest star from Nulandistan. I saw her ‘sing’ Gypsies Tramps and Thieves by that proto-Nulandistani, Cher and I thought if I could bottle this as an emetic, I could make a fortune.
Dear Mr Escobar,
I read your latest article on the South China Sea (‘Say Hello To Southeast Asia’s New Silk Roads’) and would like to contribute some info on the PCA.
1) The UN had clarified that the PCA is NOT affiliated with it;
2) The PCA rented an office in the Hague, but is NOT part of or affiliated with the UN backed ICJ.
3) The PCA is not a court of law.
4) The PCA is an ‘intergovernmental’ body created in 1899 to provide arbitration services.
5) The PCA provides a registry of arbitrators and also secretarial services for parties seeking arbitration through the empanelling of its registered arbitrators.
6) China opted out of arbitration under article 298 of UNCLOS in 2006.
7) But Shunji Yanai, Japanese head (and allied with Shinzo Abe’s right-wing militarists) of ITLOS arbitrarily and unilaterally empaneled 5 arbitrators registered with the PCA and rented the Hague for the hearing on behalf of the Philippines.
8) None of the arbitrators have background in Asian affairs; the first Chairman Pinto, a Sri Lankan, resigned after stating that the panel has no jurisdiction over the SCS.
9) By resorting to unilateral arbitration, the Philippines itself illegally breached UNCLOS which stated that any dispute is to be negotiated between the parties involved.
10) The Philippines paid the full cost of the arbitration (USD30 million).
11) The duplicity of the illegal and unilateral arbitration panel was made plain when it denied that Itu Aba – an island in the full sense of UNCLOS – is just a non-life supporting rock and therefore do not generate a 500 KM EEZ. The purpose of the ruling is to deny China, which claimed the island now occupied by Taiwan, any chance of getting an EEZ in the SCS in the future event of it uniting with Taiwan.
12) The ‘award’ of the ‘arbitration’ tribunal is neither binding, final nor legal because a) It is not a court of law, b) not part of the ICJ nor c) backed by the UN, d) it was arbitrarily and unilaterally set up and e) not legal under UNCLOS.
13) The evidence is that it (the arbitration) was a scam, using the Philippines under Aquino, to stigmatise China and provide a veneer of legality for war with China over the SCS.
14) I am writing to inform you of the alternative narrative so that you would not unwittingly refer to the ‘Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague’, and that it was ‘the Hague’s decision (Hague being synonymous with the ICJ in the public’s mind) or that the ‘decisions were taken in accordance with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea’. To do so would be to further a vicious lie.
You would appreciate the labyrinthine nature of the facts concerning the PCA. My hunch is that the scammers behind the Philippines arbitration have betted that 95% of the world would not be able to figure out that it was a scam. They would have betted that at least 95% of the world would be taken in by the ‘association’ with the Hague, the name ‘Permanent Court of Arbitration’ and be deceived to think that the ‘award’ is legal and binding and have the backing of the UN backed ICJ!
Warm regards,
Simon Chow.
Dear Mr escobar,
I would further comment that the unilateral arbitration tribunal, besides being illegal, went ultra vires UNCLOS by ignoring sovereignty claims and presuming that there are no ownership and sovereignty claims in ‘awarding’ the Philippines its 500 Km EEZ from the shores of its main islands. UNCLOS does not cover sovereignty claims. The tribunal, besides being unilaterally appointed for a unilateral ‘arbitration’ (which is a contradiction in terms) cannot, under UNCLOS, make an award on the presumption that there are no sovereignty claims on the area to be awarded as an EEZ under UNCLOS.
Warm regards,
Simon Chow
Thanks for the excellent clarification Simon.
I will be sure to share it, as should everyone interested in the truth of these operations.
You are most welcome.
The so-called arbitration ‘tribunal’ itself is a misnomer. It consists of 5 members whereas a ‘tribunal’ implies 3 members. It is really merely an arbitration panel that was unilaterally empaneled at the behest of the Philippines, but pretending to be and being held out as ‘court of arbitration’ at the prestigious Hague, under false pretences!
Thanks for that. I saw a report that the tribunal’s ruling was unlawful as China was not a participant as required for arbitration, I hadn’t realised what an underhand and manipulative operation this really was.
You are most welcome.
CHINA SOFT POWER RISING AND RECENT AMERICAN DIPLOMATIC SERIOUS SET BACK
BY FRANCIS C W FUNG, PH. D.
AMERICA, COUNTRY WITH THE MOST SOFT POWER AFTER THE FALL OF THE SOVIET EMPIRE
America the leading military power also often claims it has most of the soft power of the world. Especially after the fall of the Soviet Empire, when U.S. world influence reaches its zenith. At the same breath America also looks down on China as lacking in soft power. Even Harvard professor Joseph Nye, who coined the term soft power, claims that China has no soft power. It is true after 1979 China’s reform and open up under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping, China practiced low profile diplomacy and did not promote political ideology. However, with China’s over 5000 years of continuous important history and the worldwide influence of Chinese ancient philosophers such as Confucius, Laotze and Mengtze, China has always been an influential country of culture and philosophy. Confucianism as a governing philosophy is widely practiced by all Asian nations up to modern day. China is a cultural state and not a political state as described by Martin Jacques in “When China Rules the World”.
CHINA, THE RISING SOFT POWER NATION UNDER PRESIDENT XI JINGPING
After 30 years of phenomenal economic growth, China now is the biggest economic country by purchasing power according to World Bank. By 2020 China will become the biggest world economic power in absolute terms surpassing America. Under the leadership of President Xi Jingping, China is spreading the philosophy of mutual development, community of common destiny and win-win cooperation. This unique world unity philosophy has its roots in ancient Confucian teaching, when Confucian Scholars promoted the concept of Great Unity (Da Tong), the teachings of Benevolence (Ren) and “All men are brothers within four seas.” Since 2013, President Xi Jingping has initiated the grand vision to revitalize the Ancient Silk Road, which was the main conduit of East and West cultural and economic exchanges since the ancient times to 18th century. Through this ancient Silk Road and the marine Silk Road Chinese inventions such as Compass, paper, printing and dynamite were transferred to Europe through Arabian countries, without these inventions Europe may not as advanced today with the European Renaissance. The Chinese Silk Road revitalization, termed the “One Belt One Road” initiative is a grand initiative to connect Western Europe, South East Asia and China through Central Asia and Eastern Europe by an economic belt with all modern infrastructures such as high-speed rails, internet and power transmission lines. A 21st century marine ocean road with modern ports and infrastructures will connect China to Africa through South East Asia, Arabian nations. Through this grand “One belt One Road” initiative China will be spreading the philosophy of mutual development, community of common destiny and win-win cooperation to all the emerging nations, thus leading to the 21st Century globalization that will be more wide spread and inclusive than the current failing 20th century globalization led by America. Inevitably, by 2020 when China has invested 1 trillion dollars to the “One Belt One Road” initiative that will lead to 2.5 trillion dollars annual trade between China and the Silk Road nations, China’s soft power will no doubt surpass the U.S. without using political ideology.
RECENT AMERICAN DIPLOMACY SERIOUS SET BACK
The inevitable China rise in soft power is evidenced by the recent major U.S. set back in diplomacy. When China launched the Asian Infrastructures Investment Bank (AIIB) in 2014, America out of self-interest was doing all it can to convince its NATO and Asian allies not to join the AIIB. America was concerned that the AIIB will challenge U.S. dominance by competing with World Bank and Asian Development bank both controlled by America. For the first time in modern history America influence failed to win world support in a major world undertaking of great consequences. Despite America’s arm twisting, major NATO European Nations joined AIIB as founding partners and all Asian nations joined with the exception of Japan. To vent its anger, America described U.K.s joining the AIIB as an act of kowtowing to China. Actually by not joining, America is being isolated in buildup of the “One Belt One Road” initiative, the greatest infrastructure building project in human history. It is unanimous among all U.S. scholars and diplomats, America suffered a historical diplomatic set back and is a big loser in this case.
The recent America “pivot to Asia” was designed to constraint China’s rise of influence. The South China Sea territory conflict was exploited by America in all angles possible as an outsider in the name of Freedom of Navigation to assert its hegemony. In reality South China Sea freedom of navigation is never a problem, all concerned nations including China and U.S. have vested interest to maintain freedom of navigation. To challenge China’s influence, America was determined to use the strategy of divide and conquer by forming military alliances throughout Asia. In a not so subtle speech at the Shangri-La Security Conference, the U.S. Defense Secretary, Ashe Carter, announced China’s building of public service infrastructures such as light houses, weather observation stations and traunami warning buoys is like building a great wall of sand to isolate itself. In its all-out effort to win influence to constrain China, America wastes no efforts to pressure ASEAN 2016 Conference to side with Philippine in its dispute with China. To America’s dismay the final ASEAN declaration demanded outside nations not to interfere in the South China Sea dispute and the best resolution of dispute is through bilateral negotiation between countries involved, this is the Chinese position all along. Without any doubt this is the most humiliating historical defeat of U.S. hegemony since the glory days when America could block China’s rightful U.N. entry from 1949 to 1971. For 22 years American hegemony ruled the U.N. and denied China’s rightful position as a U.N. founding member. From the days as dictator of U.N. to today’s failure to influence ASEAN for our self-interest to contain China is indeed a drastic decline in U.S. world soft power.
A MULTIPOLAR WORLD OF PEACE AND HARMONY IS BETTER WITHOUT AMERICAN HEGEMONY
In conclusion, the world with China rising is leading to a multipolar world. Especially with the rise of all the emerging nations along the “One Belt One Road’ initiative, the 21st century globalization will be complete and all inclusive, much more prosperous and harmonious than the failing 20th century globalization. Thus the rebalance of world soft power is a very positive movement that all nations will support!!!
In Service of World Harmony
Francis C W Fung, PH.D.
Director General
World Harmony Organization
San Francisco, CA
It is very unlikely that the transition to a multi-polar world can be achieved without war. As a last resort, there is likely to be a major attempt to stop the transition and the attrition of the hegemon’s soft power with the use of military power – the one remaining advantage that the Hegemon and those likely to come to power there after the presidential election, think they still have. Afterall they have a history of resolving issues to their advantage by the simplifying power of the gun! Their rhetoric are matching and their threats of nuclear annihilation are exceeding the hate speeches of Hitler in the runup to WW2. Let all men of goodwill pray that this may never happen and that the Almighty God will stop it for the sake of mankind!
Excellent ‘mise-au-point’ by Simon Chow. What is really flabbergasting is the US delusion that the political game can be played with PR stunts like this without the bluff being called. This is magical thinking.
I once intervened in a discussion about ‘Americans play monopoly, Russian play chess’ (in politics) adding that ‘Chinese play Go’. The baffling response was ‘Americans play poker because ‘achievers’ can’t waste time’! After I stopped laughing I came out with my own version: ‘Americans play poker with loaded dice and if they are caught they pull the gun and the winner takes all’. Now the problem is that the others have guns also. The times of ‘gunboat diplomacy’ are long past.
Americans are spoiled children arrested in their psycho-mental development at the egocentric stage, whence their belief in magic. Notions like “Great Unity (Da Tong), the teachings of Benevolence (Ren) and ‘All men are brothers within four seas’, ‘Tao'” are completely alien to their mentality informed by ‘exceptionalism’ (the egocentric conviction that their opinions and whims are necessarily right because they are ‘theirs’). This is a disease that cannot be cured but by ‘prayer and fasting’ (like the boy possessed by the demon from the Evangile). Can you see the Americans taking that way?
I agree with your points. But need to mention that poker is a card game and dice (loaded or not,lol) aren’t used in the game.
Uncle Bob 1,
I surmise that you are not a gambling fan, which is very commendable. I personally hate it.
“Loaded dice” sounded to me more ‘rhetorically’ effective than ‘marked cards’. But I am sorry to spoil your lol poking fun at me:
“Poker dice are dice which, instead of having number pips, have representations of playing cards upon them. Poker dice have six sides, one each of an Ace, King, Queen, Jack, 10, and 9, and are used to form a poker hand. The classic poker dice game is played with 5 dice and two or more players. Each player has a total of 3 rolls and the ability to hold dice in between rolls….etc.” (Not LOL).
Whatever. Even if they play fair poker, they tend to settle with their guns in the event that they are dealt with a losing hand! That seems to be the experience of the Russians in Ukraine. Not to mention their Red Indians!
Simon & Dr. Fung,
Your contributions are very welcome. Most of us have no real knowledge of China or just a smattering of it. It is not an easy endeavour for obvious reasons. When I told once a Chinese friend that I project to learn Chinese when I retired, he just laughed at me. But of course, it is not impossible. There is nothing ‘exotic’, ‘alien’ to our mentality in the Chinese mentality. The traditional philosophy of the Western world would have been very comfortable with ‘Confucianism’ (as a default term for Chinese culture and civilization). What is today the “West” is a departure from a common tradition shared by peoples from East to West (as the striking similitudes between the neolithic cultures of Yang Shao and Tripolie-Cucuteni at the opposite ends of the ‘Silk Road’ would suggest). All the concepts supposedly specific to Chinese philosophy were the same as those of the classical “Greek” philosophy which are the same as those of the Orthodox Christianity. Most of all the notion of ‘Truth’. Isn’t ‘zhen, shan, mei’ the same as the Platonic triad of ἀληθές “true”, ἀγαθόν “good,” καλόν “beautiful”? Isn’t ‘Tao’ the ‘λόγος’? Did not the Christ said: “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life”?
Dear WizOz,
Thank you for your appreciation. I am a Christian of moderate Calvinistic persuasion. Traditional Chinese philosophy is open to Christian influence as in your quote from John 14:6 – I am the Way, the Truth and the Life. No one comes to the Father but by me. Confucius acknowledged that he did not know the spiritual and therefore did not venture into the spiritual, confining himself only to the existential. Confucianism therefore is opened to a spiritual compact with bible-based Christianity. That is likely the reason when the Gospel of Jesus Christ is spreading so readily in China. As I see it, the problem with the USA and the West in general is accelerating atheistisation. The neocons now effectively in power and control over the US presidency are atheists in practice. So was Hitler, Mao and Stalin and generally all those who led the world into WW2. Now this is a brave new world that the neocons are leading the world into – which is actually a well-trodden path to war and disaster. In contrast, even Putin made a sort of moral/spiritual compact through the Russian Orthodox Church sometime after he came into power. The neocons acknowledged only human ingenuity and power as the way forward for mankind. The world has seen this before! Only prayers (and fasting for some) can save mankind now!
For sure, that’s the Way we should strive to follow. It is an arduous ascending march along it, far longer than the 25,000 li! But did not Laozi say: “A journey of a thousand li starts beneath one’s feet”? To succeed we must know what the Goal is and what the steps should be. And we know that the ‘Kingdom of God is not of this world’. And the first steps should be ‘Cheng-ming’, the ‘Rectification of names’, ‘Orthotes onomaton’, the correct usage of words and names. Truthfulness. Atheists “belong to their father, the devil, and they want to carry out his desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, refusing to uphold the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, because he is a liar and the father of lies”.
Dear WizOz,
Perhaps you may enlighten me: Why didn’t the Russian Orthodox Church send missionaries to China and spread Jesus Christ’s Gospel? Why leave it to the Pope, the Protestants and other non-descript groups? I have read the doctrine of the Orthodox Church. It did contain the Gospel message of Salvation and did not deviate in a major way from the Christology doctrines at the heart of the Apostles’ faith especially St. Paul’s. As I’ve written, Confucianism is opened to Bible-based Christianity. Prez Xi Jinping said recently that the Chinese state is willing to meet (‘ying chau’) the needs of religion – like satisfying the demands of a market. That’s why he is continuing negotiations with the Pope. Why not the Russian Orthodox Church also negotiate for access to China? This would bring the Russian and Chinese people closer and enable the Russian Orthodox Church to follow the Way (Jesus Christ) in spreading His Gospel and the worship of God the Father to the Chinese.
Because the “Russian orthodox Church” is just a russian government apparatus secretly run by the FSB. Religion is a state matter in Russia. Do you want the chinese spiritual life being run by the Kremlin ?
On the other hand, protestant denominations are CIA backed. Do you want China to become a new South Korea ?
The Catholic Faith is not backed by any given country. It is a state – the Vatican – and is no more french than german or canadian. For China, it is critical. I think Chinese are practical overall and the leadership is acknowledging that christianity is gaining significant momentum in China and that any attempt to stop it by force is doomed to fail in the long run, just like the roman empire could not stop it. On the other hand, islam is at the door and getting agressive by the day.
So XI will pick the most acceptable option and make it easier for one of the christian denomination to grow. As i have stated, russian orthodoxy is a non-starter both because it is a political tool of the Kremlin and it is deeply infected by panslavic supremacism. Catholicism today is not a “white faith” : Europe is nearly no more catholic while Africa is a dynamic part of that church. Not being related to any given significant world power, it is the a serious option.
Plus, if the chinese leadership is willing to let this happen, China could rapidly become the biggest catholic country in the world in a matter of decades. That would allow China to become an even more influential global power. China would be able to play within the western sphere of influence.
For all those reasons i think China will try to find an agreement with the Vatican while trying to slow protestant activities which are openly supported by the State Department as a subversion tool.
Thanks HLD. I always have a feeling that some protestant NGOs are backed by the US. Not that it is bad in itself because these played a crucial role in the de-radicalisation of Germany and Japan after WW2. I have friends who were US soldiers who returned to Germany and Japan as Christian missionaries despite carrying with them crippling scars (one was shot through his throat and could hardly speak) from wounds they received from enemy soldiers! Their love for their enemies inspired me from my youth!
However, from my experience, I don’t think organised religion can dominate my spiritual life, or anybody’s provided they understand the Bible for themselves. And in this, the Bible says that they have the Holy Spirit to help them understand. Christian denominations and related organisations tend to give orderliness to worship and help to tamp down on abuse through radicalisation outside the bounds of Bible-based Christian doctrine. And as I noted of the Russian Orthodox Church, they do incorporate the Gospel and the vital Christological doctrines in their teachings. Putin’s recent restrictions on Christian evangelism outside the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Church and its various official premises, I guess, was inspired by perceived backing by the CIA and suspicions that they are tools for the political destabilisation of Russia.
But as Xi found out and as you pointed out, religion and especially Christianity, is a spiritual need of the Confucian masses and they can’t stop it. So they are opening up their ‘market’ for religion. So why leave the Chinese spiritual market to the Pope, Protestants and Islam? Why not the Russian Orthodox Church also send their missionaries to participate in the free market for religion in China, and in the process fulfill the command of Jesus Christ to bear witness for Him ‘to the ends of the Earth’ and save a few more souls?
Dear HLD,
BTW, the Chinese appear to be too emotionally and psychologically secure and thick-skinned as a people to be bothered by racist/supremacist tendencies of people they interact with. By and large, they would just ignore them and concentrate on things that matters. I myself remembered that I also ignore racism when I studied in a Western country and benefitted as a result from the positives. In my case it was more thick-skin and God’s grace! I remember a white Pastor actually made a racist remark at me which I ignored. I actually enjoyed most of his sermons! I noticed that not all are like him and many are actually very friendly and non-racial; including a few very beautiful blue/eyed blonds! So bring on the Russian Orthodox Christian missionaries and their alleged slavic supremacist tendencies! The Chinese have seen it all (i.e. race-based supremacist tendencies) and can look beyond these negatives in order to learn from the positives.
The Chinese are conscious that they too have a few racist-supremacist tendencies. But by and large the community and the state frown on these and try to overcome them!
http://atimes.com/2016/08/vietnam-moves-new-rocket-launchers-into-disputed-s-china-sea/
Vietnam just moved missile launchers into the SCS. The launchers and rockets to follow are Israeli manufactured. The hegemon’s hand in this mini ‘Cuban Crisis’ in the making? Will China stand for this? Looks like Vietnam is more than willing to antagonise China. I think some action is likely end September or in October 2016.
meanwhile down under in schizophrenic Australia the military are hiring like crazy. I get a daily update of all jobs listed locally by email and my rough estimate is that 50% of the ads are placed by the armed forces.
If Multinational Companies can be “people ” then rocks can become Islands.