Australia
can't say it hasn't been warned about the consequences of cuddling up
to the Americans
Shun
US 'tiger' and Japanese 'wolf', Chinese colonel warns
A
Chinese military officer has raised the spectre of nuclear weapons
and warned Australia not to side with the United States and Japan as
a territorial dispute in the East China Sea continues to escalate.
SMH,
26
January, 2013
Senior
Colonel Liu Mingfu, of the National Defence University, blamed
America’s ‘‘orchestration’’ and Japan’s ‘‘militarism’’
for rising tensions over disputed islands known as the Senkaku in
Japan and the Diaoyu in China.
Colonel
Liu Mingfu asked that his views be conveyed directly to Julia
Gillard.
‘‘America
is the global tiger and Japan is Asia’s wolf and both are now madly
biting China,’’ Colonel Liu said. ‘‘Of all the animals,
Chinese people hate the wolf the most.’’
China
was a peaceful nation but it would fight to the death if seriously
attacked, he said.
Both
sides and the US have in recent days traded strident warnings over
alleged territorial incursions, while holding out hopes of a
diplomatic breakthrough. Diplomats privately warn of a growing risk
of accident or miscalculation.
Asked
about the People’s Liberation Army fighting capability, Colonel Liu
referred to the PLA department that houses China’s strategic
missile and nuclear arsenal. He raised a hypothetical scenario that
he said would justify a nuclear attack, while clarifying that he was
not calling upon China to take such measures.
‘‘If
this Japanese wolf again attacks America’s Pearl Harbour or
Australia’s Darwin, how do you know it wouldn’t receive another
nuclear bomb?’’ Colonel Liu said. ‘‘The world would hail if
Japan receives such a blow.
‘‘I
don’t want to mention China here, as it is sensitive,’’ he
added.
Colonel
Liu is one of a group of outspoken hawkish PLA officers who do not
claim to speak on behalf of the leadership but are
given licence to speak stridently on some issues at certain times.
Foreign
diplomats say they can serve to provide unofficial warnings, test
foreign reactions and rally nationalistic support for the Communist
Party or sections of it.
They
can also complicate China’s diplomatic objectives and place leaders
under pressure to demonstrate their nationalistic credentials.
Colonel
Liu directly warned Australia not to follow the US or Japan into any
military conflict with China. He said Australia should play the role
of a ‘‘kind-hearted lamb’’ and China would discourage it from
being led astray.
‘‘Australia
should never play the jackal for the tiger or dance with the wolf,’’
he said.
Colonel
Liu asked that his message be conveyed directly to the Prime
Minister, Julia Gillard, as she prepares to deliver a major speech on
national security.
Like
her predecessors, Ms Gillard has maintained that Australia will not
have to choose between its economic and security interests.
‘‘American
hegemony is not at its dawn and not at its zenith,’’ Colonel Liu
said. ‘‘It is at its sunset and night is coming.’’
A
consultant to the US Pentagon and author of The Rise of China Versus
The Logic of Containment, Edward Luttwak, said China was ‘‘grossly
overestimating’’ its military capability and underestimating the
regional response.
He
said deep geopolitical forces were at work that could be managed but
not reversed.
‘‘Militant
nationalism is the only possible substitute for ex-communists who
seek to retain power,’’ Mr Luttwak said.
‘‘And
for the US, its entire political culture mandates the containment of
China’s new territorial revisionism.’’
Colonel
Liu and other military figures have been buoyed by the ascension of
the new Communist Party and PLA boss, Xi Jinping. One of Mr Xi’s
new political mottoes, the ‘‘China Dream’’, echoes the title
of a best-selling book by Colonel Liu, which has had sales
restrictions removed since Mr Xi’s arrival.
Colonel
Liu said his views did not represent Chinese government policy, but
were consistent with what mainstream political and military leaders
think, if not what they say.
In
separate written comments he said the US was building ‘‘a
mini-NATO’’ to contain China, with the US and Japan at its core
and Australia within its orbit.
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