Escalating
US-China Tensions: Australia “Actively Considering” Dangerous
Provocation in South China Sea
By
Peter Symonds
Image: A pair of P-3 maritime reconnaissance aircraft over the Pacific. The Australian government is considering flying such an aircraft within 12 nautical miles of Chinese-claimed territory. Source: US Department of Defense
2
June, 2015
Amid
escalating tensions between the US and China over the South China
Sea, the Australian government is “actively considering conducting
its own ‘freedom of navigation’ exercises near artificial islands
built by China in disputed territory,” according to a front-page
article featured in today’s Australian.
Written
by the newspaper’s foreign editor Greg Sheridan, who is
well-connected in defence circles in Washington and Canberra, the
article revealed that what is under discussion is far more
provocative than recent US military operations close to
Chinese-controlled atolls. “The Royal Australian Air Force aircraft
would fly within 12 nautical miles (22 kilometres) of an artificial
island build by the Chinese, with Beijing certain to react,”
Sheridan stated.
The
Wall Street Journal reported last month that the Pentagon was drawing
up plans for warships or military aircraft to enter the 12-mile
territorial zone around a Chinese islet. The Australian article makes
clear that Washington could be contracting out this reckless venture
to Canberra, which has a track record of functioning as an attack dog
for the US on foreign policy in the Middle East and Ukraine.
According
to the Australian, the plans involve a P-3 surveillance aircraft that
could possibly take off from the Butterworth air force base in
Malaysia. Alternatively, “within a few months” an Australian
warship on a port visit to the Philippines or Vietnam could
“incidentally” breach “what Beijing considers its territorial
waters.” Although the Australian warship HMAS Perth is currently in
the South China Sea, the P-3 flight “is likely to happen more
quickly … as it is much easier to arrange at short notice.”
The
article claimed that Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s government had
made no decision, but “such an exercise … is considered very
likely.” While unlikely to be, formally at least, a US-led
operation, Washington is obviously heavily involved. Canberra has
been in close dialogue with Washington over the South China Sea and
was informed in advance of last month’s much-publicised US flight
with a CNN news crew near Chinese-administered reefs.
The
Obama administration may well prefer Australia or another ally to
intrude within the 12-mile limit and risk a miscalculation or error
leading to an open clash or other forms of Chinese retaliation.
Moreover, unlike Australia, the United States, although denouncing
China’s actions in the South China Sea as illegitimate, has not
ratified the relevant international treaty—the UN Convention on the
Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
The
dangers of war with China are now being discussed openly. In a
Timearticle entitled, “The next step toward possible conflict in
the South China Sea,” retired US navy captain Bernard Cole said the
chance of shots being fired stood at “better than 50-50.” He
suggested that the initial volley would more likely come from the
Philippines or Vietnam—or, one could add, Australia.
The
detailed behind-the-scenes planning reflects the aggressive stance
taken by the US, Australia and other allies against China at last
weekend’s Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore. Echoing US Defence
Secretary Ashton Carter, Australian Defence Minister Kevin Andrews on
Sunday called for a halt to all land reclamation activities in the
South China Sea, highlighting China’s “large-scale” activity in
particular.
Andrews
told the Wall Street Journal that Australia would directly challenge
any declaration by China of an Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ)
in the South China Sea. An ADIZ is not a territorial claim, but
requires aircraft to give advance warning before entering the zone.
The US responded to China’s 2013 announcement of an ADIZ in the
East China Sea by provocatively flying nuclear-capable B-52 bombers
into the area unannounced.
Andrews
indicated that the Australian air force would ignore an ADIZ and
proceed with flights in the South China Sea. “We’ve been doing it
for decades, we’re doing it currently … and we’ll continue to
do it in the future,” he said. The Wall Street Journal reported
that “top US Navy and Marine commanders in the Pacific have been
urging close ally Australia since last year to consider joining
multilateral naval policing missions in the South China Sea,”
alongside Japan and the US.
In
recent weeks, a drumbeat of condemnation of China has been rising
throughout the Australian media and political establishment.
Opposition Labor foreign affairs spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek urged
caution so as not to further inflame tensions in the South China Sea.
Nevertheless, she declared today that “it is important to have
freedom of navigation and freedom of flight through an area that is
an extremely busy trading route.”
Commentary
in Murdoch’s Australian has been matched in the Fairfax Media by
international editor Peter Hartcher, who entitled his article today,
“South China Sea: The tiny islands that could lead to war.” After
referring to “a persistent idea” that it is not worth risking war
between the US and China over “nothing more than tiny islands and
useless reefs,” Hartcher proceeded to argue that far more is at
stake—key shipping routes, large undersea oil and gas deposits, and
above all US supremacy.
“The
US Seventh Fleet has been unchallenged ruler of the Pacific since
World War Two. A fast rising China is now challenging,” Hartcher
wrote. “On the level of global governance, it’s about whether
there are any rules governing countries, or whether a country can get
its way through use of force.” He concluded by applauding
Washington’s provocative actions, saying: “The good news is that
China’s creeping invasion of the region is now being openly
challenged for the first time by a country with the power to do
something about it.”
What
is really at stake in the South China Sea is Washington’s
determination to maintain its unchallenged hegemony throughout
Asia—now central to global manufacturing and economy. Confronted
with China’s economic expansion, the Obama administration initiated
the “pivot to Asia”—an all-encompassing diplomatic, economic
and military strategy aimed at subordinating China and the region to
American interests.
If
there is any force in the world that has wantonly and criminally
sought to “get its way through the use of force,” it is US
imperialism, which has waged one war after another during the past
two decades to advance its ambitions. Now amid the deepening
breakdown of world capitalism, the US, in league with its allies, is
willing to risk war with nuclear-armed China to maintain its global
dominance.
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