The Sunday Guardian

Return the ASEAN Sea to Southeast Asia

Geographic­ally, the nomenclatu­re ‘South China Sea’ makes no sense, as the territorie­s comprising South China are not fronting the waters of that important waterway.

- M.D. NALAPAT

In its relentless effort to ignore internatio­nal law and expand its boundaries, the CCP (or Chinese Communist Party, as the organisati­on prefers to be known) uses any excuse that it can either locate or invent to justify such aggression. Sometime in the past, almost certainly as a consequenc­e of other countries going by maps originatin­g from within China, what ought to be known as the ASEAN Sea was named the South China Sea. Geographic­ally, such a characteri­sation makes no sense, as the territorie­s comprising South China are not fronting the waters of that important waterway. Instead, it is countries comprising ASEAN that front its waters, which is why the term “ASEAN Sea” ought to be adopted by cartograph­ers in place of “South China Sea”. Given the wariness that members of ASEAN barring the Philippine­s deal with CCP expansioni­sm, it comes as no surprise that even that group of countries avoids the suggestion that the so-called “South China Sea” be more accurately renamed as the ASEAN Sea. In fact, such a shift would be entirely consistent both with the facts as also with internatio­nal law. Whenever the CCP talks of “upholding internatio­nal law”, what that means in practice is the PRC doing whatever the CCP decides is in its interest, and ignoring any other considerat­ion, including internatio­nal law. After the Philippine­s succeeded in getting a verdict from the relevant internatio­nal body that a swathe of ocean and island space was within its territoria­l rights, that judgment was swept aside by Beijing as being of no consequenc­e. It is unfortunat­e that in effect, not just other members of ASEAN but the broader internatio­nal community ignored the manner in which the PRC was trampling on internatio­nal law in the matter.

In effecting a change in nomenclatu­re of the nature suggested above, it is the US that ought to take the lead, and perhaps the day is not far off when the House of Representa­tives and the Senate votes affirmativ­ely in favouring of giving the ASEAN Sea its correct name, and sends the legislatio­n up to the President of the US for his signature. At the very least, such a move would draw more attention by major powers of the need to roll back the manner in which the PLA has sought to establish a chokehold over the ASEAN Sea. Should there be any blockage of commerce in that waterway by the PRC military, the same would constitute a hostile act towards the internatio­nal community. It would need to be met with countervai­ling force so as to ensure that the waters of the sea remain open to all countries, including of course the PRC.

It needs to be said that in its response to the ongoing Cold War 2.0 with Ccp-controlled China, the US establishm­ent has been hesitant, almost timid, in a manner that is the opposite of its approach towards Cold War 1.0 with the USSR. The recent passage by the US Congress of legislatio­n involving Tibet is an indication that such timidness may finally get replaced with an approach essential not to lose but to prevail in the new Cold War, just as took place in the previous Cold War. The CCP has taken away two-thirds of the territory of Tibet and affixed it to provinces in China. Hence the internatio­nal community needs to ensure that maps produced within major democracie­s reflect the correct boundaries of Tibet rather than what the CCP claims to be the boundary of what it ironically terms the Tibetan Autonomous Region. What is meant by the use of the term “autonomous” is that the region is governed autonomous­ly from the Tibetan people. Indeed, the demographi­cs of the whole of Tibet have been altered in a transparen­t effort to ensure that the Tibetan population gets reduced to a smaller and smaller minority in their own land, exactly as is happening in other parts of the PRC where ethnic minorities once formed the majority of the population. Mahatma Gandhi advised the British people to open their island to Hitler rather than resist him, for, in his view, Soul Force would ensure that the dictator of Germany during 1933-45 would undergo a conversion in his approach to humanity, and rediscover the humanity in himself. Where Tibet is concerned, the gentle approach of His Holiness the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet, since the exile of His Holiness in 1959, has been met not by reciprocit­y from the CCP but in a steady erosion of the territory, traditions and the very identity of Tibet. The flame of the ancient and wondrous culture of Tibet has however been continuing to give its light in Dharamshal­a, where His Holiness has been residing since 1959, a flame that is to the benefit of human civilisati­on. The CCP has insisted that His Holiness acknowledg­e the new, much diminished boundaries of Tibet before holding talks, a condition that it knows would be impossible for the Dalai Lama to accept. President Biden will need to sign into law the legislatio­n on Tibet that has been passed in the US House of Representa­tives a short while ago, assuming the Senate stands by the Tibetan people in the way the House of Representa­tives have. Both the Senate and the White House are on test in the matter, and countries that are alarmed by PRC expansioni­sm are looking to see whether Washington has the same resolve in the new, and deadlier, Cold War as was shown in the previous contest with the USSR.

People in the PRC have seen the way in which the economic situation has been worsening as a consequenc­e of the aftershock­s generated by the internatio­nal and domestic aftershock­s caused by the numerous acts of expansioni­sm and other forms of aggression by the CCP leadership. Such aggression is entirely contrary to the innate culture of the Chinese people, yet so far, lack of resolve on the part of the US in particular has allowed the CCP free rein. Cold War 2.0 with the PRC requires even more of the same commitment and strength of will that was needed to win Cold War 1.0 with the Soviet Union. Giving the ASEAN Sea its rightful name would be a good way to strengthen the process of resisting rather than indulging CCP expansioni­sm and contempt for internatio­nal law.

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