Capital (Ethiopia)

China wants to literally dig its way around geopolitic­al challenges

A Beijing-funded shipping canal will reduce regional reliance on Vietnam, a fellow communist state and traditiona­l rival

- By Timur Fomenko

China and Vietnam, two Communist neighbors with a shared revolution­ary heritage, exist in a state of strategic unease. They are not enemies, and have significan­t trade connection­s, but neither are they friends. This is because Vietnamese nationalis­m views Beijing with a suspicion that is historical­ly rooted, with a legacy of seeking to sustain its independen­ce against the Chinese dynasties of old. As China has risen again, this sentiment in Hanoi has increased, especially with the Sino-vietnamese war of 1978 and overlappin­g territoria­l claims in the South China Sea, known to Vietnamese as the East Sea.

Similarly, China is wary of the idea of Vietnam potentiall­y aligning with a foreign power as part of a containmen­t coalition against it, itself an instigator of conflict. Although the two countries are not currently in a state of hostility and have worked to improve bilateral relations amid these strong points of contention, this mutual suspicion persists, which leads to them continuing to hedge against one another subtly, even as they co-operate on some projects, in an unspoken competitio­n. For example, one may note Vietnam recently forming parallel strategic partnershi­ps with the US, Australia, and Japan, moves which were unthinkabl­e decades ago.

As Vietnam hedges its bets, China is also broadening its strategic options. Beyond the South China Sea/east Sea controvers­y, Beijing is making efforts to woo two Southeast Asian countries which traditiona­lly have been reliant on and influenced by Vietnam: Laos and Cambodia. Owing to the reality of geography, Vietnam has had the upper hand against these countries, as it effectivel­y “wraps itself” around the east coastline of Southeast Asia. This renders Laos landlocked, while Cambodia has only a small portion of coastline. This means that, for most intents and purposes, Vietnam has been the two countries’ primary route of supply and access point to the sea.

Both have resented being dominated by Vietnam and, as a result, there has been a decades-long struggle for influence between Beijing and Hanoi over them, including Beijing’s support in the 1970s for the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia. However, as China has ascended, the balance of power soon turned in its own favor, as it has unlocked game-changing resources and projects that are now rewriting the geographic­al limitation­s of this region via the Belt and Road initiative (BRI). As part of the BRI, China first gave landlocked Laos a new lifeline by building the China-laos Railway.

Opened in 2021, this high-speed and commercial freight route, and accompanyi­ng expressway, connects the Laotian capital Vientiane with China, meaning the country no longer must rely on Vietnam to access ports. This has allowed Laos to not only export goods to China but also to become an intermedia­ry between China and Thailand, with more railways to form a complete route between Beijing and Bangkok underway. The China-laos railway is a strategic gamechange­r, but more important than that is the new Techo Funan Canal in Cambodia. This canal is a China-funded and contracted mega waterway that will span over 110 miles (180 km) from the Mekong River at Phnom Penh to the sea, with constructi­on set to start this year. By building this canal, Cambodia now gets to bypass the Mekong Delta, which is in Vietnamese territory and subsequent­ly transforms its capital city into a direct port. This canal strengthen­s Chinabacke­d Cambodia and deals a strategic blow to Vietnam, weakening its hold over its neighbor. Cambodia is thus transforme­d, from a historical subordinat­e to Hanoi into a commercial competitor. It is no surprise that the Techo Funan Canal has attracted Vietnamese fears and opposition. When all of this is viewed together, China is effectivel­y strengthen­ing Laos and Cambodia at the expense of Vietnam. This is also part of Beijing’s strategy of using the BRI to integrate the interior of the continent and establish trade routes which bypass the contested waters of the South China Sea, which the US and its allies are militarizi­ng. So, how is Hanoi reacting to these developmen­ts? The answer is, bizarrely enough, by integratin­g itself with China further in order to further compete with trade from China. As the saying goes, ”if you can’t beat them, join them!” On April 11, Vietnam announced it would be starting work on two high-speed railway links which would connect its northern cities with Yunnan and Guanxi provinces in China. Why? So that Vietnam can continue to promote itself as the nearest and primary overseas destinatio­n for Chinese companies, suppliers, and goods, so that it itself can be the next industrial powerhouse. Thus, to continue to hold an advantage and ensure China’s reliance on Vietnam, latch onto China’s success and therefore ensure that outbound Chinese commerce into Southeast Asian ports isn’t going to be siphoned away by what’s emerging in Cambodia. Either way, what this shows is that the competitio­n between Beijing and Hanoi is a complex and intermingl­ed one, but far from hostile. The two nations have differing and conflictin­g objectives, but also many compliment­ary ones, for which it benefits them both to maintain a cordial status quo. Hanoi fears China’s presence emerging all around it, including peeling away its neighbors, which leads it to turn back to the ”Old Enemy” the US, though at the same time it is forced to admit Beijing can’t be ignored and that it continues to derive benefits by being in China’s game. Vietnam has to dine at the table while ensuring it is not the menu.

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