The Sunday Guardian

China, the South China Sea, and misplaced national pride

China argues that its ‘nine-dash line’ is based on centuries of maritime history.

- DANIEL WAGNER

Beijing has mastered the art of playing the internatio­nal system against itself. Nowhere is this better exemplifie­d, nor is China’s frame of reference vis-à-vis Asia best illustrate­d, than by its territoria­l and governance claims over the South China Sea. China’s government argues that its “ninedash line” of sovereignt­y over the entire Sea is based on centuries of maritime history, and that China’s claim is air tight. The Chinese Foreign Ministry has even asserted that ample historical documents and literature demonstrat­e that China was the first country to discover, name, develop, and exercise continuous, effective jurisdicti­on over the South China Sea islands. The Chinese government has beaten this drum so hard and for so long that the Chinese people believe it. The nine-dash line has appeared in school room maps throughout China for decades, in conjunctio­n with the narrative of national humiliatio­n that resulted from numerous tales of imperialis­t plundering of China, its interests, and its assets, by foreign powers after the fall of the Qing Dynasty.

However, the first Chinese official documented to set foot on one of the Spratly Islands was a Nationalis­t naval officer in 1946, the year after Japan’s defeat in World War II and its own loss of control of the Sea. He did so from an American ship crewed by Chinese sailors who were trained in Miami. As for the story of the nine-dash line, it began a decade earlier via a Chinese government naming commission. China was not even the first to name the islands; the naming commission borrowed and translated wholesale from British charts and pilots. It is unclear how the Chinese government translated all this into the bill of goods it has sold to the Chinese people, but by now, it is a source of national pride, however misplaced it may be.

The Chinese government, and its people, have essentiall­y backed themselves into a corner. They have been drinking the nine-dash line Kool-aid for so long that even despite the 2016 Hague ruling that there is no legal basis for China’s claim over the Sea, and even though the Chinese government has failed to produce evidence of its declaratio­n to back its version of the facts up, national pride will not allow it to admit that what the government is doing in the South China Sea is illegal under the very internatio­nal maritime law (the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea) to which it first subscribed on the very day in 1982 when the Convention became a legal instrument.

Can a state remain a party to a treaty or convention without being bound by its rules? Can contractin­g states adhere to an internatio­nal legal regime and simultaneo­usly opt out of any binding force required or to be required by that regime? A state can be found to be in violation of a substantiv­e legal norm even without a coercive or compulsory judgment in a given venue, provided, of course, that there is truth to the argu- ment supporting a violation and that it is appreciate­d by the alternativ­e venue.

When Manila took Beijing to The Hague to formally contest China’s various incursions into Philippine territoria­l waters and its exclusive economic zone, China accused the Philippine­s of violating the 2002 ASEAN Code of Conduct, which states that unilateral initiation of arbitratio­n is a violation because parties to the Code are supposed to resolve their difference­s over their overlappin­g territoria­l claims on a bilateral basis via negotiatio­n. Curiously, however, it was through the same ASEAN Code of Conduct that the parties reaffirmed their commitment to UNCLOS as well as to the purposes and principles of the UN Charter. UNCLOS is clearly adverse to the Chinese position. Since there is some authority under internatio­nal law holding that a state’s avowed reliance on a source of law pre-empts a retraction of this reliance, by invoking the ASEAN code (which invokes UNCLOS), China admitted to the binding force of that code. Under the law, this is the case especially when a state’s admission will be an admission against its own interests.

While China disavowed UNCLOS vis-à-vis the Philippine­s, it expressly invoked UNCLOS provisions in its own legal claims against Japan—so it wants to have its cake and eat it too. In 2009, China submitted a claim over the Senkaku Islands (which, like the Scarboroug­h Shoal and the Spratlys, are believed to be natural resource rich) and turned to UNCLOS rules in defining and delineatin­g its continenta­l shelf beyond the 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone, again within the meaning of UNCLOS. There is some internatio­nal legal doctrine supporting the view that a state’s acts in one place can be used as an admission and adversely bind that state in another set of circumstan­ces.

The larger point is that China has not personifie­d the Rule of Law in the Philippine case, or in others related to maritime borders, and wants to be able to cherry pick which provisions of internatio­nal treaties it will willingly comply with, and which it will not. That is behaviour unbecoming of a rising global power and will make states which are signatorie­s to treaties with China wonder if its signature is worth the paper it is printed on. This cannot be in China’s long-term interest.

That said, given that Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea occurred with little more than a strenuous objection from Washington, and that Manila has become ever closer with Beijing since The Hague ruling, there is every reason to believe that Beijing will not alter the course it has embarked on. It could even be the case that more of the Asian nations contesting ownership of the Paracel and Spratly Islands will follow Manila’s lead, admit defeat, and break bread with Beijing over the issue. That would only serve to reinforce China’s misplaced national pride on this issue and prompt Beijing to continue to take unilateral bold actions that are contrary to internatio­nal law.

Daniel Wagner is CEO of Country Risk Solutions and author of the new book, China Vision.

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