But when shaking the earth, China plunges itself into the black hole that ruins itself and civilization.
China is the menace to the entire earth and humanity in the 21st-century.
The more aggressive China is, the more economically and politically isolated it will become, until a dramatic change takes place from within China, by its own people against its current rulers.
" the Philippines has launched a legal challenge at a U.N. arbitration tribunal to China's sovereignty claims over the entire South China Sea. China has so far ignored the action, but Manila calculates—with reason—that China's failure to participate will come at a considerable cost to its international reputation, particularly if it wins a favorable ruling.
And the damage to
Beijing's international standing could increase if other Asian countries
take similar legal action, as seems likely over time." (read below)
*****
Updated May 13, 2014 7:39 p.m. ET
BEIJING—As China's assertiveness mounts,
nothing seems to illustrate the impotence of Southeast Asian nations
more than their glacial progress toward a code of conduct with Beijing
on the South China Sea.
It's been a
marathon effort—and there's no end in sight: China has made it
explicitly clear it's in no hurry to move ahead. But it would be
misguided to think Beijing is shrugging off the push entirely.
The
10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or Asean, has been
imploring China for a code of conduct to head off exactly the sort of
action that's now roiling one of the most flourishing areas of the
global economy—Beijing's decision to tow a gigantic oil drilling rig
into disputed waters off Vietnam, protected by military aircraft and a
flotilla of ships.
Over the weekend,
Asean leaders once again pleaded for speedy action on a code of conduct
after a meeting in Myanmar that was overshadowed by the crisis.
Washington, too, is pressing hard for it.
Yet,
almost two decades after diplomatic efforts to reach an agreement got
under way, formal discussions between China and Asean to work out the
details have only just begun.
Chinese
Foreign Minister
Wang Yi
last year chided unnamed countries who he said wanted a "quick
fix" agreement. Such an approach, he said, is "neither realistic nor
serious."
Meantime, as diplomacy drags
on, China has been rapidly building up its military capabilities,
particularly its navy, and using its muscle to alter the landscape in
its own backyard. In 2012, Chinese ships fenced off the Scarborough
Shoal, one of the world's richest fishing grounds just off the
Philippines coast.
Positioning an oil
rig off Vietnam is an unprecedented move by China to press its natural
resources claims in the South China Sea. Vietnam accuses Chinese vessels
of repeatedly ramming its ships and opening up on them with water
cannon. A Chinese foreign ministry official on Monday described the
positioning of the rig as merely a "continuation of our regular
activity" in the area.
Many Western
analysts believe that the timing of Beijing's aggressive rig maneuver,
bracketed between a visit to the region by U.S. President
Barack Obama
and the Asean meeting in Myanmar, was designed to send a message:
to the U.S., that China intends to test its resolve to "pivot" to Asia
in support of its friends and allies who feel bullied by China; to
Asean, that China means to enforce its claims over almost the entire
South China Sea through unilateral action.
If that's the case, then what's the point of pushing for a code of conduct?
Why
would Beijing ever agree to be tied down by arrangements that Asean has
put forward to help keep the peace? Among them: full respect for the
United Nations Law of the Sea, self-restraint and nonuse of force to
resolve disputes.
The choice now facing
the U.S. and its Asian allies is often presented in stark terms: either
back down or confront China with military force.
Yet
that perspective may be overly simplistic. For a start, China has been
careful to calibrate its actions so that they fall just below the
threshold that might trigger an armed response. China is many years away
from being able to stand up militarily to the U.S.—and the presence of
U.S. forces in the region is still a powerful deterrent.
But
also, it overlooks the pressures that are building on Beijing to find
compromise solutions based on international rules and norms.
Already,
the Philippines has launched a legal challenge at a U.N. arbitration
tribunal to China's sovereignty claims over the entire South China Sea.
China has so far ignored the action, but Manila calculates—with
reason—that China's failure to participate will come at a considerable
cost to its international reputation, particularly if it wins a
favorable ruling.
And the damage to
Beijing's international standing could increase if other Asian countries
take similar legal action, as seems likely over time.
China
has no wish to be branded an international outlaw: It has devoted huge
amounts of energy over the years into integrating itself into global
rules-based institutions, even if its ultimate intention is to change
them to its advantage from the inside.
Moreover,
China's assertiveness is driving Southeast Asian countries into
America's arms. Several are forging closer relations with Japan, China's
arch-rival in the region. And, say military analysts, the prospect that
new regional groupings may coalesce to counter Chinese power may also
act to restrain Chinese behavior.
To be
sure, attitudes toward China within Asean over the South China Sea are
divided between countries like the Philippines and Vietnam, which favor a
tougher line, and those like Thailand and Singapore, which have no
direct maritime dispute with China. Cambodia, a close ally of China, has
sided with Beijing in previous discussions on the disputes. This
ambiguity was reflected in a statement issued by Asean foreign ministers
on Saturday that expressed "serious concerns" over the clashes in the
South China Sea—but without mentioning China by name.
Still,
the fact that Asean was galvanized to come out with a statement at all
underscores that Beijing pays a certain price for its aggressive
actions. And that price rises the longer that discussions on a code of
conduct limp on.
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