|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
Chinas blocking of US aircraft carrier highlights naval
tensions in the Pacific
By John Chan
10 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A diplomatic row between the US and China over the docking
of American warships in Hong Kong harbour points to sharpening
tensions between the two countries.
The issue first appeared publicly when Beijing reversed a decision
to allow the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk and its escort warships
to dock at Hong Kong on November 21 for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Hundreds of family members and friends had flown to Hong Kong
to be with the crew of the ships, which at the last minute were
denied entry to the harbour. Beijing backtracked the following
day, saying the warships would be allowed entry on humanitarian
grounds, but it was too late to revive the visit.
The US military was quick to protest. Admiral Timothy Keating,
head of US Pacific Command, told reporters that Chinas stance
was not indicative of a country who understands its obligations
as a responsible nation. Just a few days earlier, Beijing
had rejected the request of two US minesweepers to enter Hong
Kong to avoid a storm. On November 28, the Pentagon summoned Chinas
military attaché in Washington and issued a formal protest.
In a move designed to heighten tensions, the USS Kitty Hawk
battle group headed to its home port in Japan by sailing through
the sensitive Taiwan Strait. China, which regards Taiwan as a
renegade province under its sovereignty, issued its own statement
of grave concern over the US navys actions.
In 1996, amid a standoff between Beijing and Taipei, the former
Clinton administration sent two aircraft carriers into the area
near the Taiwan Strait.
American warships have used Hong Kong as a stopover port for
decades. Since the former British colony reverted to Chinese rule
in 1997, port calls have required Beijings approval, which
for the most part has been routinely granted. Refusals took place
in periods of high tension, such as in 1999, when the US bombed
the Chinese embassy in Yugoslavia and in 2001, when a US spy plane
collided with a Chinese fighter over the South China Sea.
Beijing initially played down the latest incident. During a
meeting in Washington on November 28, Chinese Foreign Minister
Yang Jiechi reportedly told President Bush it was simply a
misunderstanding. The following day, however, foreign ministry
spokesman Liu Jianchao contradicted the media reports, saying
the refusal was not a misunderstanding.
Yang himself expressed grave concern over Washingtons
recent decision to sell a hi-tech anti-missile defence system
to Taiwan. He referred to President Bushs meeting with Tibets
exiled Dalai Lama in October, saying it had damaged the relationship
between the two countries. While not explicitly spelled out, the
refusal to allow US warships into Hong Kong was a political retaliation.
Lius comment came just after a senior Chinese naval officer
told the Global TimesBeijings mouthpiece on
international and foreign affairsthat the US was seriously
harming Chinese interests and Sino-US ties. He noted that the
weapon sales to Taipei had sent a wrong signal and
encouraged Taiwans pro-independence president Chen Shui-bian
and his campaign for a seat in the UN. That is why a lot
of activity between China and America was stopped, the naval
officer said.
The row demonstrates the fragility of the military-to-military
ties between China and the US. During his visit to Beijing in
October, US defence secretary Robert Gates proposed to establish
a hotline between the two countries to defuse potential
confrontations. Shortly afterward, however, the Pentagon announced
a $940 million sale of the Patriot missile system to Taiwan, provoking
protests from Beijing.
The dispute over the Hong Kong visits is continuing to escalate.
Last week, a US defence department official revealed that China
had barred the destroyer USS Reuben James from visiting the port
on New Years day. Another request for a US C-17 cargo plane
to make a three-monthly flight to Hong Kong to supply the US consulate
was also turned down.
Japan has become embroiled. On November 28, the destroyer Shenzhen
made the first visit by a Chinese warship to a Japanese port since
World War II. While the purpose of the visit was to improve relations
between the two countries, Tokyo suddenly cancelled a tour by
Chinese sailors of one of Japans advanced Aegis-class destroyers,
after the Pentagon objected.
Colliding interests
The emergence of tensions over the docking of US warships in
Hong Kong is a sign of the developing rivalry between the two
countries. In the aftermath of World War II, the US treated the
Pacific as an American lake, seeking to ensure Washingtons
unchallengeable military superiority throughout the region. A
string of US military bases in Japan, South Korea and Guam, as
well as the Pacific Command centred in Hawaii, were all part of
the Cold War framework aimed against China and the former Soviet
Union.
Over the past two decades, US corporations have joined the
rush to exploit China as a vast cheap labour platform, but there
are deep concerns in American ruling circles over Chinas
rise as a potential economic and strategic rival. For its part,
Beijing is worried about Washingtons continuing efforts
to encircle China through a series of strategic alliances, particularly
with Japan, Australia and India. The US invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq raise the prospect that Chinas growing demands
for raw materials, including access to oil and gas from the Middle
East and Central Asia, could be subject to Washingtons veto.
In response, China has formed a strategic partnership
with Russia to counter the US, especially against the US military
presence in Central Asia and the threat of a US attack on Iran.
Chinas strategic doctrine is undergoing a shift from defence
of the homeland to active defence beyond its borders,
with a new emphasis on building a blue-water navy, and in particular,
a submarine fleet. As part of this strategy, Beijing has built
a string of port facilities in the Indian Ocean and South China
Sea that could be used by its navy to protect oil supplies from
the Middle East. A debate is underway in China over whether to
build aircraft carriers as a symbol of its emergence as a
sea power.
The USS Kitty Hawk featured in another incident in October
last year. While largely downplayed in the media, a Chinese Song-class
submarine apparently surfaced just kilometres from the aircraft
carrier during a routine exercise with a US battle group in the
East China Sea. The ability of the Chinese submarine to emerge
undetected so close to the heavily defended US warship reportedly
provoked consternation in the Pentagon about Chinas rapidly
developing submarine capability. China denied US accusations that
it had been shadowing the US fleet.
In the past four years, at least 16 new submarines have been
added to the Chinese navy. Aside from conventional Song-class
and Kilo-class subs purchased from Russia, China is building a
new class of Type-093 nuclear-powered attack submarine and a nuclear-powered
Type-094 submarine, armed with long-range nuclear missiles. Beijing
has reportedly received crucial technical assistance from Russian
shipyards.
The US is boosting its own naval capacity in the region. The
conventionally-powered USS Kitty Hawk has been at the heart of
the US 7th Fleet, which is tasked with deterring China from attacking
Taiwan. It is due to be replaced next year by the more powerful
nuclear-powered USS George Washington.
In a show of air power in February, the Pentagon sent its latest
F-22 stealth fighters to Okinawatheir first deployment outside
the US. Although these warplanes have returned home, the message
was clear. Beijing was particularly disturbed by reports of a
US war game in July 2006, which simulated an intensive bombing
campaign on coastal Chinese cities and other strategic targets
using F-22 and F-35 planes from Okinawa, Guam and aircraft carriers.
Despite Beijings efforts at military modernisation, the
US defence budget is still 12 times larger than Chinas and
its lead in key technologies remains substantial. The US has 11
aircraft carriers deployed around the world, each carrying up
to 90 warplanesChina has none. In 2005, the US navys
total tonnage was over 3 millionnearly 10 times the size
of Chinas, with just 340,000 tonnes. Even in the field of
submarines, the US has 73, all sophisticated nuclear-powered vessels,
compared to Chinas 55, mostly conventional.
Despite its military might, however, US influence is declining.
Chinas rapidly growing economy has displaced the US as the
largest trading partner for most Asian countries. Moreover, other
powers are emerging in the region. Russia is planning to build
six aircraft carriers in the next two decadesthree of which
will be deployed in the Pacific. Japan and South Korea are also
expanding their naval capacity and Australia is actively intervening
in the region. While formal US allies, these three countries have
their own economic and strategic interests.
The potential for conflict, particularly between the US and
China, was underscored by the comments of former US national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski. Speaking to the Foreign Policy
magazine in October, he urged Washington to seek closer cooperation
with Beijing, saying: It is not in the interests of United
States to repeat the mistake that was made in 1914, which led
to the collision that produced World War I. China has to be integrated
into the system. That means it has the right to enjoy a proper
place in it.
During a visit to China in November, Brzezinski told a group
of Chinese strategic analysts that a collision between US and
China was not inevitable. He explained: In the
previous century, changes in global forces led to dependency,
conflicts and even wars, [but] that is now history. While
the results of the failure of the established powers to integrate
Germany and Japan into the global order are evident in two catastrophic
world wars, Brzezinski offered no explanation as to how capitalism
would avoid a third disaster.
Indeed, the recent naval incidents between the
US and China point to conflicting economic and strategic interests
that could well become the axis of a new global confrontation.
See Also:
Central Asian military exercises
highlight rising great-power tensions
[25 August 2007]
China boosts military spending:
signs of a US-fuelled arms race
[8 March 2007]
China's anti-satellite missile
test points to developing space weapons race
[29 January 2007]
Pentagon report targets
China as a military threat
[21 June 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |