China’s security agenda transcends the South China Sea
ABSTRACT
In
2013, China’s president, Xi Jinping, launched a massive reclamation and
construction campaign on seven reefs in the Spratly Islands in the
South China Sea. Beijing insisted that its actions were responsible and
in accord with international law, but foreign critics questioned Xi’s
real intentions. Recently available internal documents involving China’s
leader reveal his views about war, the importance of oceans in
protecting and rejuvenating the nation, and the motives underlying his
moves in the South China Sea. Central to those motives is China’s
rivalry with the United States and the grand strategy needed to
determine its outcome. To this end, Xi created five externally oriented
and proactive military theater commands, one of which would protect
newly built assets in the South China Sea and the sea lanes – sometimes
referred to as the Maritime Silk Road – that pass through this sea to
Eurasia and beyond. Simultaneously, China’s actions in the Spratlys
complicated and worsened the US-China rivalry, and security communities
in both countries recognized that these actions could erupt into armed
crises – despite decades of engagement to prevent them. A permanent
problem-solving mechanism may allow the two countries to move toward a
positive shared future.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00963402.2016.1194056
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