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Despite the fact that the purported ‘peaceful rise’ of China was never peaceful and conversely extremely violent, it would be prudent for China to keep its territorial ambitions in check for the sake of peace and prosperity of the region.
On November 23, 2013, the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) declared China’s first ever air defence identification zone (ADIZ) over a broad area in the East China Sea that overlapped the airspace over the Senkaku group of islands. The Chinese action has thus added a new dimension of possible violence in an already tense region after China arbitrarily extended its exclusive economic zone (EEZ) completely disregarding its neighbours.
Senkaku Islands
Senkaku group of Islands, also known as the Diaoyu Islands in Mainland China or Diaoyutai Islands in Taiwan is a group of uninhabited islands controlled by Japan in the East China Sea. In 1969, the United Nations Economic Commission for Asia and Far East (ECAFE) identified potential oil and gas reserves in the vicinity of the Senkaku Islands in 1969. The Chinese and Taiwanese Governments officially began to declare ownership of the islands in 1972. Challenging Japan’s sovereignty over them has been disputed by both the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the Republic of China (Taiwan) following the transfer of administration from the US to Japan in 1972. The Chinese now claim the discovery and control of the islands from the 14th century but Japan controlled the islands from 1895 until its surrender at the end of World War II. The US administered Senkaku from 1945 until 1972, when the islands reverted to Japanese control under the Okinawa Reversion Agreement between the United States and Japan. On September 11, 2012, Japan nationalised its control over the islands by purchasing them from the Kurihara family of Japan for ¥2.05 billion but China objected to the deal, claiming that these islands are Chinese territory.
The Chinese Challenge
The PLAAF declared that all non-commercial aircraft entering a broad zone over the East China Sea must first identify themselves to Beijing at the risk of facing “defensive emergency measures” by PLAAF. The ADIZ covers the famous eight uninhabited islands, implying Japanese aircraft flying around those islands would need to submit their flight plans to China and if ‘granted permission’ would still need to maintain radio communication with Chinese authorities:
China apparently hoped to achieve multiple objectives: first, challenge the sovereignty of Japan over the islands; second, bring international focus on Chinese claim over the area; third, provoke Japan to test its reaction; fourth, test the Japan-US alliance and fifth, test global reaction to declare more ADIZ in line with its arbitrarily expanding EEZ claims—China having already announced that more Chinese ADIZ would follow.
Reactions
This Chinese action invited reactions on expected lines. The US termed the Chinese action as a destabilising attempt to alter the status quo in the region, increasing risk of misunderstanding and miscalculations, and that it would in no way change how the US conducts military operations in the region. The US followed up this statement by flying two unarmed B52 bombers into the so-called Chinese ADIZ. If China was merely signalling, then the US returned the signal. It is quite possible that China was hoping that such a counter-action would be undertaken by Japan and not the United States. Not surprising, there was no movement by PLAAF beyond a Chinese statement that it had monitored the flight of the B52 bombers, which means little. If China wanted to test the US-Japan alliance, it got the answer.
Rise of the Dragon
Ever since 1993, when China became a net importer of oil for the first time, it has been publicly declaring its intentions of stepping beyond its traditional continental land-oriented security paradigms. In January 2005, Lt General Lin Yazhou, then Deputy Political Commissar of PLAAF, stated, “When a nation grows strong enough, it practises hegemony. The sole purpose of power is to pursue power... Geography is destiny… When a country begins to rise; it shall first set itself in an invincible position.” With the recent statement of the ADIZ from the PLAAF, there is some coincidence but Lin Yazhou forgot that geography is not in favour of China as it has a limited oceanic front, and more importantly, changing geography akin to the erstwhile British Empire and blitzkrieg type of actions are unlikely to succeed. But then Chinese actions in recent years have led a cross section to conclude that this Chinese mindset is rooted in its historical “Tian Xia” (under the Heaven) concept which traditionally views “all territories” under the sun belonging to the Chinese, because of which they attach no sense to territory. So possibly when Lin Yazhou stated: “Geography is destiny,” he was perhaps hallucinating the entire global airspace being dominated by the PLAAF.
Implications and Fallouts
The fact that China has again launched fighter jets in the ADIZ ‘after’ the United States, Japan and South Korea had flown military aircraft in defiance of China’s claim, indicates that China intends to keep disturbing the status quo and throwing the gauntlet across the waters. China’s declaration of the above ADIZ apparently would have the following fallouts:
Conclusion
The Chinese declaration of the ADIZ encompassing the Senkaku Islands has the potential of escalation especially if Japanese military aircraft flying over them are physically challenged. China needs to realise that dialogue may be better than following the approach of the camel’s head slipping into the tent. Despite the fact that the purported ‘peaceful rise’ of China was never peaceful and conversely extremely violent, it would be prudent for China to keep its territorial ambitions in check for the sake of peace and prosperity of the region including its own and the world at large.