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Will There Be a US War on China?
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: The
Mideast: Get Ready To Duck!
On 30 January,
a Chinese Jiangwei II-class frigate entered the disputed waters
around the Senkaku Islands, a cluster of uninhabited rocks in the
East China Sea claimed by China as the Diaoyu Islands. A Japanese
destroyer was waiting.
When the two
warships were only 3 km apart, the Chinese frigate turned on its
fire control radar that aims its 100mm gun and C-802 anti-ship missiles
and "painted" the Japanese vessel. The Japanese destroyer
went to battle stations and targeted its weapons on the Chinese
intruder.
Fortunately,
both sides backed down. But this was the most dangerous confrontation
to date over the disputed Senkakus. Japan and China were a button
push from war.
Soon after,
a Japanese naval helicopter was again "painted’ by Chinese
fire control radar. Earlier, Chinese aircraft made a clear intrusion
over waters claimed by Japan.
China’s Peoples
Liberation Army HQ ordered the armed forces onto high alert and
reportedly moved large numbers of warplanes and missile batteries
to the East China Sea coast.
A US AWACS
radar aircraft went on station to monitor the Senkaku/Diaoyus –
a reminder that under the 1951 US-Japan mutual defense treaty, Washington
recognized the Senkaku Islands as part of Japan and pledged to defend
them if attacked. Japan seized the Senkakus as a prize of its 1894-95
war with Imperial China.
China’s state-run
media claimed the US was pushing Japan into a confrontation with
Beijing to keep China on the strategic defensive.
Japan’s newly
elected government led by conservative PM Shinzo Abe vowed to face
down with China. Spasms of angry nationalism erupted in both feuding
nations. The Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam, who also claim the
Senkakus, chimed in with their territorial demands.
A special Chinese
crisis group led by new President Xi Jinping has been set up to
deal with the Senkakus – meaning any clash there may be more likely
to become a major crisis.
Shades of August,
1914, when swaggering, breast-beating, and a bloody incident triggered
World War I, a conflict few wanted but none could avoid.
Japan is in
a difficult situation over the Senkakus. Its nearest air bases are
in Okinawa, 500 km away; Japan’s main airbases are 1,000 km further
to the Northeast. Japan’s F-15J strike aircraft have the combat
range to cover the Senkakus but they cannot linger for long with
full bomb loads due to the long distances involved. By contrast,
Chinese warplanes based on the coast near Fuzhou are well within
range of the Diaoyus.
Japan’s defense
architecture was built to stop an invasion by the Soviet Union.
Its so-called Self Defense Forces are able but not configured for
long-range offensive operations. China’s are. They have been redesigned
with a major amphibious invasion of Taiwan and a fight with the
US Seventh Fleet in mind.
Unless US carrier
strike groups intervened, Japan would probably face defeat in a
clash with China over the islands, a fact that has Tokyo deeply
worried. This latest crisis again reminds Tokyo that it is naked
before China’s nuclear weapons. This week’s incursions over Northern
Japan by Russian warplanes did nothing to calm Tokyo’s nerves.
However, war
between China and Japan sounds as crazy and illogical as war between
China and the US. Japan is China’s largest foreign investor, having
discreetly built much of China’s industry. China is a major export
market for Japan. A war against China would shatter Japan’s prosperity
and force it to embark on a hugely expensive armaments campaign,
including building nuclear weapons – which it has the capability
to do in 90 days.
China
has no desire to fight the United States unless absolutely necessary,
and less to spark a US trade embargo. China holds over $1 trillion
in US government debt. Beijing has no desire to panic all of East
Asia.
A war over
the Senkaku/Diaoyus would be like the 1998-2000 desert war between
Eritrea and Ethiopia, described as "two bald men fighting over
a comb." No matter how much fish swim around the Senkakus,
or how much oil and gas may be found underwater, nothing justifies
a war.
But, then again,
nothing justified World War I that began by a murder in obscure
Bosnia. Pray for cool heads in Beijing and Tokyo.
February
9, 2013
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2013 Eric Margolis
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