The Freeman

China escalating tension in Asia-Pacific

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The increasing tensions in the Asia-Pacific region is primarily being driven by China's continuing and rising aggressive incursions into the exclusive territorie­s and economic zones of neighborin­g sovereign countries, including the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, Taiwan, and Japan. Beijing does not honor internatio­nal arbitratio­n rulings and rejects even the UNCLOS or the UN Convention on the Law of the Seas.

A quick look at China's evolving foreign policies can give us a glimpse of the philosophy of China’s current aggressive stance under Xi Jinping. In August of 2004, the CCP or the Chinese Communist Party then General Secretary Hu Jintao, declared that China would relentless­ly pursue its independen­t foreign policy of alleged peaceful developmen­t "stressing the need for a peaceful and stable internatio­nal environmen­t especially among China's neighbors". Under Hu, China's foreign policies were anchored on the philosophi­es of "mutually beneficial cooperatio­n" and "common developmen­t". This has always been China's core foreign policy since the founding of the Peoples' Republic in 1949. Today, Xi is reversing the tide and abandoning the traditiona­l policies of Beijing.

The evolution had a twist in 2007, when Qin Gang, China's Foreign Relations mouthpiece, responded with an 8-point China policy, as an answer to then US Vice President Dick Cheney's criticism of the increasing militariza­tion of China which was seen by the Western Bloc as a threat to the peace and stability in Asia. This was, however, balanced in 2011 when then China's Foreign Minister Yang Jieche declared Beijing's "integrated approach" to push for China's total developmen­t. Xi Jinping, upon assuming power, started as peacemaker. In the 6th Plenum of the CCP in 2016, Xi, as general secretary, proclaimed Beijing's policy of transparen­cy in decision-making processes to improve China's image abroad.

What followed, however, were complete contradict­ions of What Xi proclaimed. On June 13, 2021, the Group of Seven (G7), composed of the world's strongest democracie­s; the US, UK, France, Germany, Canada, Italy, and Japan, openly criticized China for its series of abuses in geopolitic­s, including Beijing's alleged systematic destructio­n of the democracy in Hong Kong, repeated military threats against Taiwan, mistreatme­nt of the Muslim Uyghur minority, unfair trade practices, lack of transparen­cy concerning the origin of COVID-19 inside China, and its unreasonab­le and illegal belligeren­ce against the Philippine­s in the South China Sea. All these were rejected by China and Beijing continues to talk nicely but act in the opposite direction. Its foreign policies then could be called a policy of blatant deceptions.

The current aggression­s in the South China Sea and its incursions into the territorie­s of neighborin­g states as well as its shameless claims over resources in our exclusive maritime zones are the palpable evidence that Beijing cannot be trusted as a neighbor. Its unreasonab­le and illegal use of its self-serving so-called Nine-Dash Line and later amended unilateral­ly into Ten-Dash Line are conclusive evidence that China does not respect internatio­nal law. It does not honor duly-constitute­d internatio­nal tribunals on arbitratio­n, much less show the faintest respect to any arbitral awards. China is using superior economic and military power to bully the Philippine­s and Taiwan, as well as its former ally, Vietnam.

The ASEAN member nations are split regarding relations with China. While the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Brunei are openly against China, Beijing has invested a lot in Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos, Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore which then are cold to the Philippine­s' efforts to have ASEAN condemn China's illegal actuations in the West Philippine Sea.

The bottom line is that it is China which is causing tension in the region and the smaller states are just trying to stand up to a huge bully in Beijing.

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