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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
Chinese leaders seek allies against US encirclement
By John Chan
17 May 2002
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Last months tour by Chinese President Jiang Zemin to
Germany, Nigeria, Tunisia, Libya and Iran, and the visit of Premier
Zhu Rongji to Turkey, Egypt and Kenya, highlighted Beijings
concerns over the Bush administrations war on terrorism.
While ostensibly trade missions, the tours indicated that Chinese
leaders are seeking to develop alliances with the European Union
and others to resist American domination over the resources of
Central Asia, the Middle East and the Pacific.
Washingtons actions since September 11 have resulted
in a virtual military encirclement of China and undermined a protracted
effort by Beijing to expand its influence in Central Asia and
secure access to rich deposits of oil and gas. The Chinese-inspired
Shanghai Five group, which was aimed at forging close
military, economic and political ties between China, Russia and
the former Soviet Central Asian republics, has effectively collapsed.
US troops and warplanes are now based or have fly-over rights
in its member states of Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan,
as well as Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan. The Russian government,
with which China had signed a strategic partnership,
has adapted to the new circumstances and is collaborating more
closely with the US. The US is also developing military ties with
India, Chinas regional rival.
On the Korean peninsula, where China had been encouraging a
rapprochement between North and South in the hope of benefiting
economically and politically, the inclusion of North Korea in
Bushs axis of evil has pushed tensions to the
brink of war. The Bush administration has increased weapons sales
to Taiwan and restated its blanket guarantee to use whatever force
necessaryincluding nuclear weaponsto defeat any attempt
by China to force the island to reunify with the mainland. Of
even greater concern in Beijing, Washington is actively encouraging
the remilitarisation of Japanese imperialism with the aim of using
Tokyo to assist in putting pressure on China. Elsewhere in the
Pacific, US forces have moved back into the Philippines, with
which China has disputed territorial claims in the South China
Sea. Washington has also bolstered its military ties with Australia
and Thailand, overshadowing Chinas overtures to these US
allies in recent years.
Within this context, the choice of countries visited by Jiang
had considerable significance. The visit to Germany followed in
the wake of confused signals from the EU that it would, to some
extent, resist US ambitions being pursued under the banner of
a war on terrorism. Some EU leaders have openly opposed
a US war on Iraq and, while taking no action, were critical of
the tacit US backing for the Israeli invasion of the West Bank.
The main European nations have also strengthened their relations
with Iran and North Korea this yearthe other states in the
axis of evil. In all these countries, Europe has economic
and strategic interests that do not coincide with those of the
US.
In Berlin from April 8 to 13, Jiang Zemin attempted to align
China with the layers of the EU establishment that are calling
for the UN to block the US threats of a unilateral war on Iraq.
He told Der Spiegel on April 8: Like Germany and
most other states, we want to solve the Iraq question under the
conditions of a UN resolution. The same day, Jiang told
the Welt am Sonntag: We all want to fight terrorism.
But the states involved in the fight against terror each have
their own specific viewpoint.
On April 9, following meetings with German Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder and President Johannes Rau, Jiang called for Israel
to comprehensively withdraw from the Palestinian territories and
to implement the relevant UN Security Council resolutions.
He declared Chinas support for a permanent German seat on
the UN Security Council and expressed his hope the EU and
Germany will play a more active role in the Middle East issue
[the Israel-Palestinian conflict].
Jiang Zemin left no doubt as to the benefits on offer for European
corporate interests from a closer EU relationship with China.
He urged German corporations and banks to actively participate
in the energy project in the countrys west. The week before
Jiangs visit to Berlin, Brussels sent EU External Relations
Commissioner Christopher Patten to Beijing to deliver a 40 million
euro grant to assist Chinas plans to develop a 4,200 kilometre
West-East natural gas pipeline from its Central Asian Xinjiang
province to Shanghai. Patten, who was labeled a whore
by Beijing when he was the British governor of Hong Kong, was
welcomed with smiles and handshakes by senior Chinese officials.
Although the amount of money he brought was small, it indicated
the EUs interest in Chinas Central Asian energy and
economic plans.
While only the West-East pipeline is currently under construction,
a number of oil companies have investigated the possibilities
of constructing a land energy bridge, linking China
and the Korean peninsula with the largely-untapped resources of
Russias Far East and the Central Asian republics and, ultimately,
to Iran and the Persian Gulf. China, which is rapidly becoming
of the largest importers of energy, is seeking to become less
dependent on oil shipped through the Middle Eastern and South
East Asian sea-lanes that are vulnerable to blockade by the US
Navy. The potential profits flowing from the project have attracted
the involvement of major oil companies such as BP Amoco.
Modern day Silk Road
Also attracting the interest of transnational corporations
is the possibility that a byproduct of the energy projects could
be viable land trade linksa modern day Silk Roadbetween
Europe and East Asia. On April 19, the Financial Times
reported the findings of a European think tank operated by the
international railway union (Union Internationale des Chemins
de FerUIC) that rail links between Europe to Asia would
provide a cheaper and more reliable service than sea-freight
within 10 years. Linking from different parts of Europe, rail
freight could traverse Russia and Mongolia to Beijing and, through
North Korea, to Seoul. Other lines could run south connecting
with Shanghai. UIC director Paul Veron commented: Land bridges
instead of sea bridges are something very realistic. The
development of advanced road networks through Central Asia and
Chinas underdeveloped west would facilitate road freight
as well.
The offer of trade and energy links with China, as part of
closer political relations, was the focus of Jiangs visit
to Iran from April 16 to 18. Jiang signed six new agreements with
the Iranian regime over oil, gas, petrochemicals, trade, transportation
and information technology, evoking the historical links between
China and Iran along the Silk Road more than 2,000 years
ago.
Jiang Zemin openly repudiated the US stance against the Iranian
regime, telling the countrys parliamentary spokesman Mahdi
Karroubi: Our opinion [on terrorism] is not the same as
the United States. Alongside Iranian President Mohammed
Khatami, who called on China to play the leading role
in opposing the US war plans in the Persian Gulf, Jiang stated
that Iraqs sovereignty and territorial integrity should
be respected and that the UN should act to reach agreements
with Iraq and lift sanctions. The Iranian regime, with justification,
fears a US assault on Iraq will be the prelude to increased US
military threats and pressure upon its borders.
Iran is becoming an important economic partner of China. It
is already a major supplier of oil, with China-Iran trade doubling
between 1999 and 2001 to $US3.3 billion due to increased Chinese
oil imports. In the longer term, Chinas major oil companies
have ambitions to invest in Iranian oil and gas fields and feasibility
studies have been conducted into gas pipelines extending from
Iran and Turkmenistan to western China.
Zhu Rongjis coinciding visit to Turkey stressed Chinas
strategic preoccupation with these plans. Following discussion
with Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit on April 16, Zhu called
for China and Turkey to jointly combat the separatist
movement among the Turkic-speaking Uiygur ethnic minority in Xinjiang
provincethe geographical linchpin of Chinas Eurasian
ambitions. Beijing has intensified its military and police operations
in Xinjiang, which borders Afghanistan, on the pretext of crushing
terrorism. Beijings major fear is a scenario
similar to the war on Yugoslavia in 1999, with the major powers
backing ethnic separatists in Xinjiang, as NATO backed the Albanian
Kosovo Liberation Army, in order to split the resource-rich province
from Chinese control.
Some of the main Uiygur exile organisations operate from Turkey.
The motives for Turkey revoking support for the Uiygur groups
are both its own potential economic gains from strengthened EU
relations with China, and its fears of the US exploiting ethnic-based
movements in pursuit of its agenda. Ankara has publicly questioned
a US war on Iraq, fearing Washington may arm and support Kurdish
forces in northern Iraq opposed to Saddam Hussein, thereby encouraging
Kurdish separatism within Turkeys borders.
Chinas efforts to break out of US encirclement will no
doubt become further grist to the mill for the anti-China lobby
in Washingtonmore evidence of Beijings hostility
and global ambitions. While at present Sino-US relations
have the appearance of calm, the naming of Chinas ally North
Korea as part of the axis of evil indicates that a
wing in the Bush administration is pushing for a confrontation
with Beijing. Another possible pretext was supplied in recent
months by the CIA, which has accused China of supplying missile
technology to Libya and Iran and assisting them to develop weapons
of mass destruction.
See Also:
War danger grows on Korean
peninsula
[27 March 2002]
Bush visit to Japan cements
closer ties against China
[1 March 2002]
Bush's "evil axis"
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
China's stake in the
US "war on terrorism"
[26 November 2001]
China pushes into Central
Asia for oil and gas
[3 January 2001]
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