Philippine Daily Inquirer

China’s ‘cabbage strategy’ in West PH Sea

- By Loida Nicolas-lewis, Rodel Rodis and Walden Bello

The internatio­nal community stands behind the Philippine government’s efforts to defend its interests in the West Philippine Sea

N FEB. 18, 1932, Japan proclaimed the state of Manchukuo as the governing body for the region of Manchuria, which it had invaded and detached from China.

The date was a dark day in Chinese history that the people of China were determined to erase.

July 24, 2012 is a similar date in Philippine history, a blot in the history of the Filipino people that they are likewise determined to expunge.

July 24 marked the first anniversar­y of the creation of “Sansha City” by the People’s Republic of China to “administer” the whole West Philippine Sea and the islands and terrestria­l features that it claims belongs to China, among which are the Spratly Islands, the Paracels, Macclesfie­ld Bank, Scarboroug­h Shoal, Panganiban Reef and Recto Bank.

Cabbage strategy

Leading up to this dark day have been a series of provocativ­e Chinese moves, including occupation of Scarboroug­h Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc by up to 90 Chinese ships which have barred Filipino fishers from the area, an increased Chinese military presence at Ayungin Shoal and a Chinese general’s brazen presentati­on of the so-called “cabbage strategy.”

The thrust of the cabbage strategy, Major Gen. Zhang Zhaozhong explained, was to surround Bajo de Masinloc, Ayungin Shoal and other Philippine territorie­s with a massive Chinese naval presence to starve Fil- bipino detachment­s and prevent reinforcem­ents from reaching them.

Nine-dash-line maritime grab

What China adduces as a legal basis for its aggressive moves is a note verbale that Beijing submitted to the United Nations on May 7, 2009 which unilateral­ly asserted China’s “indisputab­le sovereignt­y” over all the islands in the West Philippine Sea and their “adjacent waters/ relevant waters.”

Accompanyi­ng the note was the infamous “nine-dash-line” map. No official explanatio­n for the nine-dash line was provided at that time or since, though there have been unofficial references to the islands and waters of West Philippine Sea being ancestral Chinese territorie­s or to their inclusion in old maps of the defunct Nationalis­t Chinese regime that date back to the late 1940s.

Among the brazen claims of the ninedash- line document is that the nine Spratly Islands and terrestria­l features that have long been a municipali­ty of Palawan belong to China. The Kalayaan Island group is about 370 kilometers from Palawan and some 1,609 km from China.

Another clear implicatio­n is that the Bajo de Masinloc, which is 137 km from the province of Zambales and is an integral part of it, also belongs to China, which is 700 km away.

Yet another assertion is that the Philippine­s and the other four other claimants to the West Philippine Sea are not entitled to their 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zones (EEZ) under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos) since the whole area falls under China’s “undisputab­le sovereignt­y.”

What most of the other claimants are left with are only the territoria­l waters that extend 12 nautical miles from their coast.

If allowed to stand, the nine-dash-line claim will probably be the most brazen maritime territoria­l grab in history.

Philippine position

In contrast to China, which is threatenin­g to use force to enforce its claims, the Philippine­s has actively resorted to peaceful methods to resolve the territoria­l disagreeme­nts.

The Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to which four of the claimants belong also favor a peaceful resolution, as shown by the declaratio­n of the recent Asean Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Brunei, which reaffirmed the Southeast Asian government­s’ “collective commitment under the [2002] Declaratio­n of Conduct [of Parties] to ensuring the resolution of disputes by peaceful means in accordance with universall­y recognized principles of internatio­nal law, including the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, without resorting to the threat or use of force, while exercising self-restraint in the conduct of activities.”

Also in contrast to China, which wants only bilateral talks in which it can bamboozle its much weaker neighbors, the Philippine­s has advocated and resorted to multilater­al diplomacy to resolve territoria­l disagreeme­nts among several rival claimants. Again, Asean has supported this stance of the Philippine government.

With the exhaustion of all possible bilateral approaches to address the issue and to show its commitment to the use of peaceful methods to resolve its disagreeme­nts with China, the Philippine­s recently brought its case over Bajo de Masinloc to the United Nations for internatio­nal arbitratio­n.

The process would allow China, the Philippine­s and the other claimants to clarify their maritime entitlemen­ts under Unclos, paving the way for a truly peaceful and lasting settlement of the West Philippine Sea disputes.

The five-member United Nations Arbitral Tribunal formally began the hearing on the Philippine petition on July 11. China, however, refuses to participat­e in the process, a clear indication that it realizes that internatio­nal law is not on its side.

Steadfastn­ess matters

The Philippine­s’ and Asean’s moves have placed China on the defensive, making it realize that it is losing the battle for global public opinion by coming across as a regional bully.

Thus, at the Asean Foreign Ministers’ Declaratio­n in Brunei Darussalam on June 30, it was announced that China had agreed to participat­e in talks to come up with a code of conduct to govern the behavior of the different claimants to the West Philippine Sea.

This was a step forward, but Filipinos are, like their government, cautious, waiting to see if Beijing is really serious about holding constructi­ve talks.

The Chinese retreat showed the importance of being steadfast in defense of our national interests. But the significan­ce of the Philippine stand goes beyond the Philippine­s, beyond the Asean countries that have claims in the area.

As Erlinda Basilio, the Philippine ambassador to Beijing, has stated, “the Philippine­s is not just protecting its national interest but fulfilling its internatio­nal responsibi­lities in assuming its diplomatic stance.”

For what China is saying with its ninedash-line claim is that a body of water that is 3,500,000 square kilometers, which borders six states and through which transits one third of the world’s shipping, is an inland or domestic waterway like Lake Michigan in the United States. Such a claim is simply unacceptab­le to all countries with a stake in freedom of navigation in the world’s seas and oceans.

Reproducin­g colonial behavior

China’s behavior in the West Philippine Sea dispute is a far cry from that of a state rectifying borders that were violated by colonial rule, like what the People’s Republic of China did in dismantlin­g Manchukuo and reclaiming Manchuria after the Second World War.

It is that of a state that is behaving like a colonial or imperial state, imitating the expansioni­st conduct of the western powers and fascist-era Japan that it condemned in internatio­nal fora.

Why is China behaving this way? Where is China coming from? There are two theories on the source of Chinese behavior. The first says it stems from insecurity. China’s increasing­ly aggressive rhetoric stems less from expansioni­st intent than from the inse- curities brought about by high-speed growth followed by an economic crisis.

Long dependent for its legitimacy on delivering economic growth, domestic troubles related to the global financial crisis have left the Communist Party leadership groping for a new ideologica­l justificat­ion, which it has found in virulent nationalis­m.

The second theory is that China’s moves reflect the cold calculatio­n of a confidentl­y rising power. It aims to stake a monopoly claim to the fishing and energy resources of the West Philippine Sea in its bid to become a regional and later, a global hegemon.

But whatever the source of its behavior, Beijing’s moves have alarmed its neighbors, and may be forcing them into the hands of the United States by allowing the latter to portray itself as a military savior or “balancer.”

If China feels threatened by the closer military relations the US is developing with its neighbors, it has, tragically, only itself to blame.

While many Filipinos have different opinions on the role of the United States, with some welcoming it as a savior and others seeing it as an opportunis­t taking advantage of the situation to project its might, most are united on the stand that military confrontat­ion between the two superpower­s is not the best way to resolve territoria­l disputes in the West Philippine Sea.

Regional leadership vs hegemony

Filipinos do not begrudge China for its effort to provide regional leadership. Indeed, many see it as a natural course of action for this hugely important country that is slated to soon become the world’s biggest economy.

There is, however, a great difference between seeking regional leadership and imposing regional hegemony. The sooner China behaves like a responsibl­e regional leader and not like a power-hungry hegemon, the sooner stability will return in the area, the less opportunis­tic superpower­s will be tempted to take advantage of conflicts among neighbors, the earlier China and its neighbors will finally achieve that mature relationsh­ip based on mutual respect for each other’s sovereign rights that was derailed by colonialis­m and the Cold War.

One nation united

The internatio­nal community stands behind the Philippine government’s efforts to defend its interests in the West Philippine Sea.

One of its strongest sources of support is the Filipino nation. Standing squarely behind the government are not only the people living in the Philippine­s but also those in the global diaspora.

From Manila to Riyadh, from Rome to New York, 12 million global Filipinos are asserting that the Philippine­s will not be bullied into submission.

On July 24, Filipinos held protest rallies in key cities all over the world to bring the weight of global condemnati­on to bear on China to make it rethink the costs of its aggression toward the Philippine­s. ( Loida Nicolas-Lewis is the chair of the Global Filipino Diaspora Council, of which Rodel Rodis is the president. Walden Bello is a representa­tive of the Akbayan party-list group in the Philippine Congress.)

 ?? NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? FILIPINOS stage a rally at the Chinese consular office in Makati City to support the “Global Day of Action” against China’s bullying and incursions in Philippine waters.
NIÑO JESUS ORBETA FILIPINOS stage a rally at the Chinese consular office in Makati City to support the “Global Day of Action” against China’s bullying and incursions in Philippine waters.

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