Philippine Daily Inquirer

How to give China pause

- MAPPING THE FUTURE RAFAEL LL. REYES

Most of my friends are understand­ably very upset with China for its occupation of the entirety of the South China Sea (or West Philippine Sea, if you’d like to be fruitlessl­y politicall­y correct).

It’s not just because the Philippine­s won its case in internatio­nal court in the Hague, but quite simply, even a 7-year-old would know China is being patently unfair if the child is shown a map of the swath of sea claimed by China but bordered mostly by other countries.

Some are additional­ly upset because of possible mineral, petroleum, and marine resources in the region.

Finally, there’s the concomitan­t destructio­n of coral reefs and ecosystems when the Chinese build their island bases.

I’m not as upset as most. Partially, I have doubts about how much those islands are worth to our economy. I think if a lot more were, we’d have been already exploiting those resources by now. As it is, all I’ve seen so far are some fishing boats shooed away and exploratio­n projects put on hold. (Many of the latter would be unsuccessf­ul anyway; that’s just the way the upstream petroleum industry is).

Much more importantl­y, I’m not as upset because I know in the world of geopolitic­s, losing territory to greater powers is simply the way the ball rolls. (And how the Philippine­s and the United States dropped the ball on this one!)

The post-World War II era of mostly stable borders across the world may have led you to believe otherwise. But this stability of territorie­s was created and enforced by the major powers, chiefly the United States and the Soviet Union, simply because unstable borders were the cause of the first two world wars, and they certainly didn’t want a third one, knowing that nuclear weapons might well cause human extinction.

With rare exceptions like South Vietnam, territorie­s were mostly sacrosanct even as the Cold War raged.

The major powers mostly sought to recruit allies, rather than invade and occupy territorie­s.

This state of affairs carried on by momentum and fait accompli even after the Cold War ended in 1991 with the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, but the underpinni­ngs for it certainly disappeare­d without anyone noticing.

Quite simply, the threat of nuclear holocaust for great powers who invade others’ territorie­s mostly disappeare­d—except of course if such territoria­l invasion would be a direct threat to a great power.

China’s occupation of the South China Sea is no such threat as long as it keeps the sea lanes open, and indeed, the United States and other major economies have made it clear that they wouldn’t countenanc­e China seeking even passage permission for ships plying the major trading route to much of East Asia.

But other than that, well, we and all the other weak claimants of portions of the SouthChina Sea are effectivel­y on our own.

We should know and accept that the South China Sea is lost to us. This may not have necessaril­y been the case had the United States shown aggressive­ness when China first started building its island bases, by say, blockading reclamatio­n ships. But it’s now too late as it would be too humiliatin­g for China to withdraw from fully built, operationa­l, and occupied islands. That would be akin to losing a third OpiumWar.

No Chinese leader, perhaps even the Communist Party itself, could survive such humiliatio­n. Indeed, I suspect a subconscio­us reason for this Chinese obsession with the South China Sea is to get back at the West for the destructio­n wrought upon it as a result of losing the OpiumWars.

We are not alone in losing territory. Ukraine is never getting Crimea back from Russia, nor Georgia, South Ossetia. Mexico is never going to get Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and California back from the United States, even though President Polk in his memoirs revealed that the pretexts for the Mexican-American War (or North American Invasion if you’re Mexican) were contrived so that the United States could annex the territorie­s it wanted.

As for China, celebritie­s are never going to get the Dalai Lama his country back with photo ops. Having lost wars, the Ottoman Empire are the Prussian Empire are but relics for historians. This list is endless on every continent, from ancient to modern history.

What we can do, however, is try to make China’s occupation of the South China Sea a direct threat to the great powers. Though we’ll never get our maritime territory back, we can at least deny China the commercial use of it. How? We should announce—preferably along with our other aggrieved neighbors—that since internatio­nal bodies like the UN Security Council are unable to defend our rightful territory as properly adjudicate­d in an internatio­nal court, the Philippine­s is immediatel­y withdrawin­g from every treaty that covers warfare.

Because we’re weak and don’t have anyone willing to help defend us, we reclaim the right to use any means necessary to defend ourselves, whether nuclear, chemical, biological, etc.

We, of course, don’t currently have the means to develop such weapons we should explain, but simply reserve the right to do so in the future.

If we want to push the envelope a little, maybe we can even do symbolic violations of internatio­nal treaties by putting poison in our bullets or making bayonets that look like nasty ice picks.

This may work because the United States and any other countries who contemplat­e sanctions will realize they would look like total bullies and bad friends since the Philippine­s is the aggrieved party and doesn’t pose a threat to anyone.

But if they don’t punish the Philippine­s, what’s to stop Japan, Germany, South Korea, Taiwan, Saudi Arabia, and many other more advanced and richer countries from making the same claim and doing the same thing, and for real this time? Such countries arming themselves with nuclear and other WMDs would indeed pose a threat to existing great powers. So could we properly adjudicate the South China Sea please?

The other option, of course, is the ostensibly more utilitaria­n route of making nice to China, and in exchange for not embarrassi­ng it too much for its stealing the South China Sea, ask for financial assistance that we need as a stillpoor country. This appears to be what our government is doing today. The problem is that China long ago consciousl­y weaponized its financial resources. This is the reason why it allowed Taiwan to entangle its economy with China’s and the reason why it’s making huge investment­s and giving large loans for various strategic projects everywhere in the world. It aims to expand its geopolitic­al power in this way, and we will not outsmart China in financial matters.

They will get more out of these deals than we do, no doubt. Nor will China stop with the South China Sea; already, it’s contesting Philippine maritime territoria­l claims in the east of the Philippine­s, lest anyone think China cannot possibly make more absurd claims.

I’m told that in an Asean forum, when claimants of the South China Sea ganged up on China, the Chinese representa­tive told his Philippine counterpar­t, “You should be careful; you’re all economical­ly dependent on us.” To which I wish, our official had retorted, “Whether or not that’s true, contrary to what you believe, not everything is for sale.” This article reflects the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stand of the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s or MAP. The author is a member of the MAP National Issues Committee and the CEO of FIGS, Inc. Feedback at <map@map.org.ph> and <Rafael.Reyes@figs.com.ph>. For previous articles, please visit <map.org.ph>

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines