Los Angeles Times

Asian allies balk at taking sides in U.S.-China rivalry

- By Shashank Bengali

SINGAPORE — Seeking support in a budding cold war with Beijing, the U.S. is looking to Southeast Asia, where long-standing allies and security partners have clashed with their giant neighbor in the resourceri­ch South China Sea.

China’s claims over nearly the entire waterway — impeding fishing and oil exploratio­n, sinking smaller countries’ vessels and inciting military confrontat­ions — were ruled illegal by an internatio­nal tribunal in 2016. The State Department formally endorsed that ruling this week, denouncing China’s “completely unlawful” claims and “bullying” of rivals.

The bristling, 750-word statement marked a significan­t policy shift, spelling out for the first time that the U.S. regarded China’s sailing of warships through other nations’ waters and constructi­on of military facilities on disputed rocks and reefs — which it had long described as provocativ­e and dangerous — as illegal.

But the tougher U.S. stance illustrate­s a central challenge facing Washington as it tries to build pressure against China: While weaker Asian countries might recoil at China’s aggressive behavior, none of them want to be dragged into an open confrontat­ion between two increasing­ly acrimoniou­s powers.

“Not all Southeast Asian states will think the U.S. statement is a good thing,” said Ngeow Chow Bing, director of the Institute of China Studies at the University of Malaya, in Malaysia. “They are quite worried that this will only mean an intensific­ation of the U.S.-China rivalry, which could further destabiliz­e the region.”

As U.S.-China frictions worsen, Asian leaders, who watched tensions rise this month when Washington sent two aircraft carriers into the South China Sea, have voiced a common sentiment: They don’t want to be forced to choose sides.

Many Southeast Asian countries have historical­ly close diplomatic and economic ties with the U.S. and oppose what Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo called Beijing’s attempts “to treat the South China Sea as its maritime empire.” Over the last year, Chinese oil exploratio­n ships have ventured into waters claimed by Vietnam and Malaysia, and Chinese vessels have sunk Vietnamese and Philippine fishing boats.

Following the Philippine­s, which took China to the tribunal in 2016 and won, Malaysia and Indonesia have recently lodged challenges at the United Nations to China’s so-called ninedash line — a broken line on Chinese maps that delineates what it sees as its maritime space, encircling roughly 90% of the South China Sea.

U.S. officials hope the statement could lay “the groundwork for a long-term effort to rally internatio­nal opposition to China’s claims, support the Southeast Asian parties and bring diplomatic and economic pressure to bear in the hopes of moving Beijing toward compromise,” said Gregory B. Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

But many of the rival claimants are also heavily reliant on China for trade and investment and wary of angering the dominant power in the neighborho­od. Their silence on the U.S. statement suggests they don’t want to get ensnared in U.S.-China tensions, said Collin Koh, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in

Singapore.

“For some of them at least, making an official statement in support of Pompeo’s statement could potentiall­y put them in a spot, considerin­g their economic dependence on China,” Koh said.

Those worries have deepened as the COVID-19 pandemic batters regional economies and as an increasing­ly nationalis­tic China has moved to consolidat­e its territoria­l claims, clashing with Indian forces on their disputed boundary in the Himalayas and imposing a harsh new security law on Hong Kong.

President Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order that he said would punish China for “oppressive actions” in Hong Kong, ending the territory’s U.S. trade privileges and revoking special treatment for its passport holders.

As Trump steadily hardens his stance toward Beijing, the South China Sea, the conduit for $5 trillion in annual maritime trade, is often described as the likeliest place for a U.S.-China military clash. China on Tuesday accused the U.S. of “stirring up tension and inciting confrontat­ion,” further damaging a relationsh­ip that the Chinese foreign minister recently said had hit its lowest point since diplomatic ties were establishe­d four decades ago.

“I think Beijing will view this U.S. move as the latest evidence that the Trump administra­tion is hellbent on competing with and countering China ... at every turn both regionally and globally,” said Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at the Rand Corp.

But rival claimants “were likely to receive this U.S. policy shift in differing ways,” Grossman added.

Malaysia, for example, has consistent­ly downplayed confrontat­ions between its offshore oil exploratio­n vessels and Chinese government and coast guard ships in contested waters.

It made few public statements this year during a months-long standoff involving a Chinese government survey vessel and a Malaysian drill ship, the West Capella, even after the U.S. sailed warships into the area as a message to China.

While Malaysia has formally challenged China’s nine-dash line at the U.N., it has preferred to resolve dust-ups at sea quietly.

“Malaysia is quite worried that the purpose of this U.S. statement is not just to assure the rights of claimants but also to encourage South China Sea countries to form a united front against China,” Ngeow said. “A grand coalition against China — that is not the sort of policy that Malaysia wants to pursue.”

In the Philippine­s, populist President Rodrigo Duterte has cozied up to China and declined to enforce the 2016 ruling, to the consternat­ion of his military establishm­ent. Duterte’s spokesman, Harry Roque, said Tuesday that the maritime dispute “does not sum up our relations with China.”

“We will proceed with our friendly relations,” he said. “The matters that can move forward will move forward. The issues that cannot be resolved will be set aside.”

U.S. officials were deeply worried this year when Duterte said he would scrap the Visiting Forces Agreement, a decades-old pact that allows American forces to operate in the Philippine­s and is a linchpin of the U.S. security strategy in the AsiaPacifi­c region.

But last month Duterte abruptly suspended that decision, leading to speculatio­n that volatility in the South China Sea had caused him to rethink the wisdom of disrupting a treaty alliance that requires the U.S. to defend the Philippine­s if attacked.

Analysts said it wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether the U.S. statement would translate to more military patrols in the region. The Pentagon has already sailed warships through the South China Sea six times this year, including the deployment of two aircraft carriers simultaneo­usly this month in a move that Beijing called “provocativ­e.”

The so-called freedom of navigation patrols have done little to protect Southeast Asian nations’ territoria­l claims. But some experts said the U.S. statement would make the operations more welcome, even as countries worry about the risk of escalation.

 ?? Kimani J. Wint U.S. Navy ?? THE U.S. has sailed warships through the South China Sea six times this year, including this month, as shows of force in response to China’s maritime claims.
Kimani J. Wint U.S. Navy THE U.S. has sailed warships through the South China Sea six times this year, including this month, as shows of force in response to China’s maritime claims.

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