China’s Intrusions are a Major Threat to Freedom
of the Seas’
By Eric MargolisOctober 31, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Russia and US
warplanes are flying way too close to one another over Syria and may
soon, in Iraq. Drones are all over the place. An accident is
inevitable. Civilian airliners are increasingly at risk over the
Mideast. US ground troops may enter Syria.
This week the missile destroyer, USS Lassen,
openly challenged the maritime exclusion zone drawn by China around
its latest militarized atoll, Subi reef, in the South China Sea – a
sort of poor man’s aircraft carrier that hugely annoys Washington
and its Asian allies.
China is building other man-made islands by
dredging submerged atolls. Japan and China are at dagger’s drawn
over the disputed Senkaku (Daiyou in Chinese) Islands. The
Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, South Korea, and Taiwan all
have overlapping claims in the region. China rejects all other
nation’s claims.
Beijing says the new atolls are only for civilian
use, but no one believes this. The raised reefs are a key part of
China’s claim to 80% of the South China Sea, a key conduit for its
trade, oil imports, and rich fishery zones. Suddenly, previously
unknown bits of rock like the Paracels, the Spratley’s, Scarborough
Reef, Fiery Cross, Senkakus and Subi reef have become key bits of
geography. Tensions are particularly high between China, Vietnam and
Japan.
America’s Asian allies are too scared of China to
do much about China’s muscular takeover of the South China Sea –
which Beijing calls “the 9 dash zone.” So the Asians are all hiding
behind America’s apron, hoping Uncle Sam will face down China.
Who is right in this dispute? As a former student
of international law in Geneva, here’s my view: Washington is on
the right side of international law.
China is wrong to lay exclusive claims to the
atolls and China Sea. Its claims are based on flimsy historic
documents and the suspicious finding of religious relics, a dubious
method long used by Israel to justify its land seizures. In fact,
China is doing just what Israel has done in the West Bank, using
salami tactics and seizure of high ground to back claims by creating
facts.
Beijing is mulling declaring an air defense
identification zone over the entire South China Sea, though it
lacks ground or air-based radars to see what’s going on over the
vast maritime area. Such “ADIZ” zones would sharply raise tensions
with the US, South Korea and Japan. When China asserted an ADIZ over
the East China Sea in 2013, the US Air Force flew two B-52 bombers
right through the Chinese ADIZ.
The US is right that China’s aggressive intrusions
into the seas around it are unacceptable and a major threat to
freedom of the seas. Beijing is very sensitive to freedom of
navigation in its region and potential threats posed to its
essential imports of oil and raw materials. This is a vital Chinese
national interest.
Fair enough. But the US has egregiously violated
international law by invading Iraq, a major crime, and trying to
overthrow Syria’s legitimate government. Two wrongs don’t make a
right.
As in Syria, aircraft from all sides are flying
dangerously close, warships are playing chicken, and threats are
growing hotter. The China Seas are hardly worth risking war when
diplomacy holds the answers. Besides, China would be unwise to go to
war against the US 7th Fleet backed by Japan.
If war did erupt, might China’s new ally Russia
get involved on Beijing’s side? Might India, newly a maritime
power, decide to go after rival China’s Mideast oil lifeline? Would
Vietnam and China fight, as they did in 1979? Would an angry China
finally invade Taiwan? Lots of dangers.
A good way to calm things down is for the US to
stop buzzing China’s coasts and provoking North Korea. Imagine if
Chinese warships appeared off my hometown, New York City?
The US must learn to lower its profile in Asian
waters and China must do deep breathing and use Confucian wisdom.
Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning,
internationally syndicated columnist. His articles have appeared in
the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune the Los Angeles
Times, Times of London, the Gulf Times, the Khaleej Times, Nation –
Pakistan, Hurriyet, – Turkey, Sun Times Malaysia and other news
sites in Asia. Via https://www.lewrockwell.com
copyright EricMargolis.com