I asked a couple of days ago what the official Chinese response for domestic consumption was likely to be to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s statement last week at an Asian security forum in which she called on China to tackle offshore territorial disputes in the South China Sea through international consultations.
Beijing is, of course, furious at what it sees as US intervention in its own backyard, especially as it has preferred dealing with South-east Asian nations on a bilateral basis (and, as I’ve mentioned before, making unilateral decisions like barring Vietnamese fishermen from the area).
A strong indication of how China is likely to try and spin US intervention came with a piece run by the official Xinhua News Agency yesterday that questions US intentions and suggests the involvement of a superpower in the region will only ‘complicate’ matters and ‘bring tragedy’ to those concerned as a result of a strategy of ‘divide and rule’.
It’s difficult to see how the writer could have written this with a straight face. China’s policy of insisting on dealing with disputes in this region bilaterally rather than through regional forums is well-documented, and it hasn’t been averse to the kind of diplomatic ‘coercion’ it now accuses the United States of.
The article goes on to state: ‘Unfortunately, some countries around the South China Sea are embracing the US strategy, thus voluntarily playing into the hands of Washington…But the fact is that things will most likely run counter to their wishes, and they will finally turn into a chess piece of a superpower.’
And it concludes:
‘Asian countries should display wisdom in resolving the issue through direct friendly consultations, and should be on guard against being used as a chess piece paving the way for outside involvement.’
Such comments sounded to me both hypocritical and patronizing in equal measure. But I was curious to get a couple of other perspectives from the region so I contacted Filipino lawmaker Mong Palatino and Philippines-based blogger Julius Rocas for their take on China’s interpretation of events.
And Rocas was particularly scathing. He said China’s ‘protest’ was ‘littered with hypocrisy’ as has been demonstrated, for example, over the disputed Spratly Islands (which are claimed by a number of nations) and which China has tried to occupy.
‘The one nation in the region that has threatened peace and stability is China itself…its navy has been providing escorts to Chinese fishing vessels and their submarines have been reported to be harassing US vessels in the area. So how can China talk of peace and stability without conflict when it has been using its military might to dominate the issue ever since?’
He said that although many in South-east Asia would like to take a unified ‘Asian stance’ and fend off Western meddling, the Philippines for one has recognised it’s no match for China and so has had to rely on the United States for diplomatic and military support.
‘It’s clear that this has become another front for the conflicting interests of two superpowers,’ Rocas added. ‘When China described it as something that will “jeopardize the status quo” in the region, it meant that US intervention or involvement would mean jeopardizing China's continuing dominance in the South China Sea.’
Palatino had a similar take, also noting that China is already embroiled in the Spratly row and arguing that its criticism is almost certainly motivated out of concerns for its own interests, rather than a principled desire for Asian brotherhood.
‘Both countries want to play big brother in the South China Seas but Southeast Asian nations must resist,’ he said, arguing that by working together through ASEAN these countries will be better able to thwart the ‘sinister’ motives of both the US and China.
China may not like what the US is doing, but implications of South-east Asian naiveté seem wide of the mark. In the Philippines at least, they’re well aware of what the big two are up to.








RW
US is just wasting her time, alienating people, helping a hopeless cause.
Not only is US embroiled in 2 wars, it’s also provoking war with Iran, holding larges scale military exercises off North Korea, and now selling armaments to Taiwan and provoking China in the South China sea.
What more does this poor US country want? Hard power is strong, but US soft power is like dead right now.
SE Asian
US soft power is dead?? According to whom? You must be dreaming.
You don’t seem to be aware of what’s really going on in the region. Southeast Asians do not want to see China ripping off 80% of the sea and calling it “theirs”. It’s that simple. Hard power is exactly what will be needed to stop the Chinese navy from harassing and killing innocent fishermen.
Wow
Most Westerners don’t even have a clue about what is going on in the Spratly disputes let alone Chinese people themselves.
Western media ppl should do research because this article clearly shows they don’t have a single clue about what is going on.
MV
@Wow: Please, if you are so well versed on this issue, impart some of your knowledge to us. What exactly is this article lacking?
The_Observer
Talking about hypocrisy. Earlier in July Japan expanded its Air Defense Identification Zone (Adiz), the space that the aircraft of other states can not fly in without being identified, near Taiwan in the East China Sea, without first consulting with Taipei. That zone between Taiwan and Japan was set by the Americans after it defeated Japan in WWII.
Now that Secretary Clinton has indicated that the USA is taken an interest in Asian border matters, will she also be telling the Japanese to pull back to the proper zone? That one is easier done as there are official records of the boundaries of the Identification Zone.
ajax3715
I watched a CCTV forum recently about this issue and I couldn’t keep a straight face as the co-called Chinese expert from Chinese Defense College (?) claimed that China has never made any aggressive in the area. What about your invasion of the Paracels and the Mischief Reef? I don’t mind if somebody finally calls out the growing Chinese bully even if it makes it beet red. Somebody has to do it and I’m glad someone finally did. China has to realize that if it wants the respect of its neighbors, it must earn not. It can’t be done by bullying them into submission just because you are the biggest elephant in the backyard. As the adage goes: with great power comes great responsibility. China should take note.
Chacha
Given China’s present maritime aggression in East Sea and South China sea, it is obvious that it wants to control these regions trade route just like what the West has done for centuries. It is sad that China, with its new found economic might, is falling into the trap that the West has fallen yet hypocritically lambasting the west for what happened in the past. China is not holier than the previous imperialist Europe, Japan, and the current imperialist US.
What bothers me though is that it prefers to bully SEA that has been colonized by the West. No wonder SEAsia is so wary of the Chinese. It almost the same scenario since the Europeans launched their ships into the region.
For China to justify is maritime expansionism against the previous Western expansionism. It should be expanding its territories in the West, not in Southeast Asia that never EVER had done something against China