Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Chinese-Philippine confrontat­ion

The Philippine coast guard reported last week that two of its ships were involved in a confrontat­ion with the Chinese navy in the South China Sea. According to the Philippine­s, the Chinese vessels were engaged in unsafe maneuvers. The incident occurred ne

- By George Friedman George Friedman is an internatio­nally recognized geopolitic­al forecaster and strategist on internatio­nal affairs and the founder and chairman of Geopolitic­al Futures. www.geopolitic­alfutures.com

This episode is of little military significan­ce since the Philippine­s and China have been dueling in the region for years. What is significan­t, however, is the timing. In January, the Chinese launched a significan­t diplomatic opening with the Philippine­s.

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. had accepted an invitation to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in China. The meeting, which seems to have gone well, represente­d a potential threat to the United States, which was the dominant outside power in the region and had considerab­le influence in the Philippine­s.

Relatedly, Marcos met with U.S. President Joe Biden in Washington on Monday.

The Philippine­s had found itself in – or maneuvered itself into – the tension between China and the United States. A fundamenta­l imperative of Beijing has long been to have unlimited access to the Pacific. China is an exporting power, and its position relative to Taiwan and the Philippine­s made Beijing vulnerable to a blockade by the U.S.

China had concentrat­ed on the northern flank of this problem, trying to seduce or force Taiwan into expelling the U.S. Navy and other American assets in order to secure its access to the Pacific. Another potential route was between the islands of the Philippine­s, which are plentiful enough to make it difficult for the U.S. to blockade. Finally, there’s the gap between Taiwan and the Philippine­s that could be used.

The Chinese have tried to intimidate Taiwan by sea and air, hoping that the threat of war might cause Taiwan to change alliances or the United States to withdraw. This has been an increasing­ly tense area, but neither the Taiwanese nor the Americans buckled.

That left China with the options of either facing an extremely risky naval war with the United States over Taiwan or shifting its focus southward to the Philippine­s. Hence the summit between Marcos and Xi. Obviously, Xi was eager to go forward with the relationsh­ip, but the Philippine­s backed away.

It’s unclear whether this was because Marcos saw greater economic and security benefits in remaining aligned with the United States, or because significan­t pressure from the U.S. forced the Philippine­s to step back. Notably, the U.S. was granted expanded access to Philippine military bases following the U.S. defense secretary’s visit to Manila in February.

With this, Xi’s Philippine­s gambit appears to have failed, or rather backfired, creating another major block between the South China Sea and the Pacific for Beijing. The American wall still has gaps, of course, but the biggest brick between Taiwan and the northern Philippine­s is unlikely to fall.

The Philippine­s and China announced on Monday that they will hold talks on fishing rights – which may indicate some sort of accommodat­ion, although it’s far from a solution to the real issues.

It’s not surprising, then, that the pressure on Taiwan has continued and even intensifie­d. It’s also not surprising that China has been increasing­ly aggressive in the Spratlys and is engaging the Philippine navy and coast guard with increasing assertiven­ess. Rather than the door opening, it seems to be closing on a fundamenta­l interest of China: having unfettered access to the Pacific.

China is also seeking to force the Philippine­s to reverse its relations with the United States by raising the possibilit­y of conflict, a strategy it has used with Taiwan for years. But it has never actually moved toward battle. Taking Taiwan would be difficult, and China cannot risk a defeat, which would undermine its internatio­nal standing and even its internal stature.

The Philippine reality makes it even harder for the Chinese to consider war there, particular­ly with U.S. forces to be housed in the country. But given that it takes time for forces to deploy, if China is going to try to be engaged in an aggressive posture, now is the time to do so.

But as in Taiwan, posture and launching a war are very different things, and at this point, it’s unlikely China can rapidly break down the door. The most it has done so far is send ships to harass the Philippine navy and perhaps extract some sort of lesser concession­s.

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