|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
Joint Russian-Chinese war games: a reaction to aggressive
US policies
By Peter Symonds
24 August 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
China and Russia staged their first-ever joint military exercises
over the past week. While the stated aim of Peace Mission
2005 was to combat terrorism, separatism and extremism,
there is no doubt that the war games stem from deep concerns in
Moscow and Beijing over the aggressive policies of the Bush administration,
especially in the Middle East and Central Asia.
China had wanted to hold the war games in Fujian province,
directly opposite Taiwan, as a warning to the Taipei government.
Beijing, which regards Taiwan as a renegade province, has repeatedly
warned that it will respond militarily to any moves towards formal
independence. Joint exercises with Russia in Fujian would have
sent a sharp message not only to Taipei, but also to Washington,
which is committed to defending Taiwan against Chinese attack.
Russia initially proposed that the exercises be held in Chinas
western province of Xinjiang, close to the Central Asia, where
both countries share common concerns about the growing US presence.
In the end a compromise was reached. Wary about too openly supporting
China over Taiwan, Moscow agreed to hold the exercises on the
Shandong peninsulawell to the north of Fujian, but still
on the Chinese coast.
As far as Beijing was concerned, the military exercises made
the required point. Eight days of joint naval, air and troop manoeuvres
culminated in a live fire exercise beginning yesterday
that rehearsed a naval blockade, an amphibious landing and a forced
evacuation. Given that all of the Central Asian republics are
landlocked, the most obvious target of this imaginary UN mission
was the island of Taiwan.
In all, nearly 10,000 troops were involved7,000 from
China and 1,800 from Russia. Moscow also used the opportunity
to put its warships, submarines and aircraft on display, including
the sophisticated TU-95 strategic bombers and TU-22 long-range
bombers, which it is hoping to sell to the Chinese. Russian military
sales to China, worth $2 billion annually, are a significant component
of burgeoning trade between the two countries.
But the overriding considerations for China and Russia are
strategic. During the Cold War, the Stalinist bureaucracies in
the two countries were bitter rivals and came to blows in border
clashes along with Amur River in 1969. Following the collapse
of the Soviet Union, Moscow and Beijing became increasingly concerned
at the intervention of the US into the newly established, resource-rich
Central Asian republics.
At Beijings initiative, the Shanghai FiveRussia,
China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistanwas established
in 1996 to counter American influence in the region. Uzbekistan
joined in June 2001 and the body became known as the Shanghai
Cooperation Organisation (SCO) with a permanent secretariat headquartered
in Beijing.
The SCO has become the means for closer China-Russia cooperation,
particularly after the US established military bases in Central
Asia as part of its intervention into Afghanistan. Moscow and
Beijing both regard Central Asia as their backyard and thus a
region of vital strategic concern. For China, it is also a significant
source of oil and gas to meet the countrys rapidly expanding
energy demands.
Early last month the Chinese and Russian presidents met in
Moscow and issued a statement entitled World Order in the
21st Century. While not mentioning Washington by name, it
referred to the danger of unilateralisma codeword
for US global dominationand called for a greater role for
the UN. The statement declared mutual support on key issues
like Taiwan and Chechnya and for stability on the Korean
peninsula.
Just days later, on July 5, the SCO meeting in Kazakhstan called
for the US to set a timetable for the removal of its bases from
Central Asia. While supporting the Bush administrations
war on terrorism in general terms, the grouping pointed
out that the active phase of the Afghanistan intervention
was over and called for the US to set a deadline for ending the
temporary use of bases.
US officials rejected the suggestion and accused China and
Russia of bullying the Central Asia republics. For
Washington, Afghanistan was simply a convenient pretext for establishing
a military presence in a key strategic area of the globewhat
was previously part of the Soviet Union. The US reacted to the
SCO statement by promptly bringing its own pressure to bear.
US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld flew to Kyrgyzstan in
late July and extracted assurances from the government that US
troops could stay for as long as was needed to stabilise Afghanistan.
He also obtained guarantees from Tajikistan that US warplanes
would continue to enjoy overflight rights. Uzbekistan, however,
has given the Pentagon a deadline of 180 days to pull out from
its Karshi-Khanabad air base.
All of the SCO members are concerned about US political intrigues
in Central Asia and elsewhere in the former Soviet Union. So-called
colour revolutions in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan
have resulted in regimes that are generally more sympathetic to
Washington. Concerned that his regime may be next, Uzbek President
Islam Karimov reacted angrily to US criticisms of his crackdown
on protesters in May.
Coming in the aftermath of the SCO summit, the joint Russian-Chinese
military exercises are aimed at presenting a united front against
potential US interference and intervention. Significantly all
of the SCOs Central Asian members were invited to send observers
to watch the war games. Moscow and Beijing clearly regard closer
military relations as an initial step towards a broader strategic
alliance.
At a joint press conference in Vladivostok, Russian Colonel
General Yurii Baluyevskii emphasised that China occupied a
key position in Russian foreign and strategic policy. He
stated that the war games were designed to ensure the readiness
of both militaries to counter the challenges we face today
in the Asia-Pacific region and in the world as a whole.
Official US reaction has been low-key. US Admiral Gary Roughead
told Associated Press last week: We are very interested
in the exercise, were interested in the types of things
that theyll do. The Pentagon sent two spy planes and
two warships to the area to gather information. US State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack added a note of warning: We would
hope that anything that they [Russia and China] do is not something
that would be disruptive to the current atmosphere in the region.
There is no doubt, however, that Washington views the prospect
of a Russia-China alliance as a potential threat. The US already
has formal military alliances with Japan and South Korea and substantial
US bases in North East Asia. Some 10,000 US personnel are currently
engaged in two weeks of joint war games with an unspecified number
of South Korean troops aimed at reviewing their ability to counter
North Korea.
In particular, the Bush administration is concerned about the
ability of an economically expanding China to challenge US hegemony
in Asia. During the 2000 presidential elections, Bush declared
that Beijing was a strategic competitor not a strategic
partner. Since then, however, the White House has toned down its
rhetoric, particularly after Beijing supported the so-called global
war on terrorism, and helped to pressure North Korea to participate
in talks over its nuclear programs.
Sections of the Republican rightwing regard such an approach
as unpardonably timid. A recent comment in the extreme right-wing
Weekly Standard damned this years annual Pentagon
review of the Chinas military as a mix of happy talk,
flabby strategic musings and sobering facts and accused
the Bush administration of toning down its initial
more alarming conclusions about Chinas strategic intent.
In conclusion, it declared: [O]ur rosy rhetoric about our
constructive relationship with Beijing, leave us at
a disadvantage as China ratchets up the competition. As a practical
matter, this attitude often leaves us a day late and a dollar
short when it comes to matching new Chinese initiatives.
Taken on face value, these remarks are simply absurd. The US
dwarfs China economically and militarily and has been systematically
forging alliances with and establishing bases in Chinas
neighbours. What concerns the Weekly Standard writers is
that the Bush administration is not being forceful enough in ensuring
that no country or combination of countries has the capacity to
in any way challenge untrammelled US domination in the Asia Pacific
region and internationally.
It is, however, precisely the Bush administrations political
intriguing and bullying, and its reckless military adventures
in Afghanistan and Iraq that is provoking a reaction in Moscow,
Beijing and other European and Asian capitals. The joint Chinese-Russian
military exercises are one more sign that Washingtons rivals
will not passively allow their economic and strategic interests
to be trampled upon.
See Also:
Russia and China call for
closure of US bases in Central Asia
[30 July 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |