Artikkelen viser til kinesernes taktikk overfor Fillippinene for å stjele større områder. (Red.)
The dangerous Chinese
military behaviour – time to make a call
GEOPOLITICS & POLICY
07 MAY 2024
|
By: Michael Shoebridge
It shouldn’t
be a surprise to hear that a Chinese jet has endangered an Australian Navy
helicopter and the lives of its crew by unprofessional flying and launching
flares in front of it in the Yellow Sea explains Strategic Analysis Australia's
Michael Shoebridge.
This is just
one of hundreds of similar
aggressive and dangerous acts from Xi Jinping’s Peoples Liberation Army in
the Indo Pacific in the last two years.
What’s
important is what happens from here. That can’t be more of the same - either
from the Chinese government and its military or from our own government and
Defence organisation.
A media release from Richard Marles
on this latest Chinese military aggression towards Australian Defence Force
personnel is a welcome shift from the practice of not telling the public about
incidents by claiming ‘operational security’. Prime minister Albanese has also
spoken on Australian television to tell us the Chinese military behaviour is
unacceptable.
But doing
the same thing the Govt did at the time of the sonar incident in November 2023
that injured an ADF diver is clearly not going to change Chinese behaviour.
Then, PM
Albanese didn’t raise the PLA’s dangerous
sonar use against the Australian Navy last year with Xi Jinping despite meeting
him face to face at the time at APEC in America just days after the dangerous
sonar incident, but he did raise trade & wine
sales.
Instead, the
government made ‘appropriate diplomatic representations’ – which were promptly
ignored and rejected by Chinese government officials. Then, Richard Marles put
out a sternly worded media
release –
after Mr Albanese’s meeting with Xi, with officials making appropriate
representations through normal channels. And Mr Albanese spoke publicly about
the incident once he was back home in Australia.
But leaving
contact with the Chinese government to carefully phrased representations by
officials to officials while being silent in his face to face meeting with Xi
told the Chinese leader our govt didn’t prioritise the Chinese military’s
dangerous behaviour enough to mention it at leader level. Unsurprisingly, Xi
felt no pressure to restrain his aggressive ships’ captains & pilots.
Now more
lives have been threatened, this time while the Australian military was
enforcing a UN sanction against North Korea that China has signed up to.
And what is
the government doing this time? Making ‘appropriate
diplomatic representations’ and putting out a media release to tell the
domestic audience here in Australia it is acting.
We should
have no expectation that this will change the behaviour of the Chinese military
because this is the playbook we’ve used before and we know it doesn’t work. And
this time, we can be even more certain that senior officials expressing concern
is pointless, because just last week China hosted the ‘Western Pacific Naval
Symposium’ and
Australia’s Navy Chief, Mark Hammond, spoke directly with the head of the
Chinese Navy asking for him to end the practice of dangerous and threatening
behaviour by the Chinese military when it encounters our Defence Force in the
region.
Days later
we have this latest incident involving a Chinese fighter jet and an Australian
Navy helicopter. Officials aren’t directing this Chinese policy, so the head of
the Chinese Navy or even the most powerful Chinese diplomat can’t stop it. Xi
Jinping can.
It’s time
for Mr Albanese to use his leader to leader relationship, pick up the phone
& tell Xi to stop. Foreign Minister Wong has said this direct dialogue
is important “not just to take forward our shared interests, but also to
exchange views on the issues that matter to us and to navigate wisely, any
differences we have”.
If it now
turns out that the leader to leader dialogue we were told was a key outcome of
the government’s successful diplomacy that ‘stabilised’ our bilateral
relationship isn’t useful for wisely navigating this dangerous incident between
our militaries, what is it good for?
If Mr
Albanese does make this call, three things can happen: Xi Jinping can refuse
the call or reject the very idea that the Chinese military’s dangerous
behaviour happened. Xi can be polite and use reassuring words but let the
Chinese military continue to act dangerously and endanger their own lives and
those of other militaries they encounter, or Xi could actually direct his
pilots and ships captains to restrain themselves.
Any of these
outcomes is useful to Australia and every other nation whose militaries operate
in the Indo Pacific and encounter Xi’s Peoples Liberation Army, Navy and Air
Force. The first two show that Xi Jinping knows about his military’s behaviour,
is happy to let his military intimidate and coerce others and is comfortable
with the risk that this might result in damage and death. That would end any
speculation that his pilots and ships captains are just making their own
decisions about what they do, and would confirm that their aggression is
directed from the most senior level in Beijing.
And if after
Mr Albanese calls, the unexpected happened and Xi Jinping directed his military
to rediscover restraint and professionalism when they encounter our and other
militaries in the region, that is an outcome that would make our world safer.
It’s also
time for Australia to step up with partners & allies like the Philippines,
Japan & the US & roll back some of the aggressive Chinese military
presence in others’ maritime territories. That involves some risk, but probably
not much more than the risks to life and limb our Defence Force men and women
already face when operating in the region near the Chinese military. Acting
together with international partners also lowers the risk of the Chinese seeing
an opportunity to bully others separately – their preferred mode of behaviour.
A place for
rolling back this Chinese aggression is in Philippines national territory like
the Second Thomas Shoal. There, Chinese coastguard, militia and navy vessels
are harrassing and damaging Philippino vessels
resupplying the Philippines outpost, which is a rusting out grounded ship on
sitting on the shoal.
The Chinese
plan seems to be to starve out the Philippino military personnel on the shoal
wait until the grounded ship they’re on falls apart and becomes unliveable, and
then move in to take possession of the shoal.
A joint US,
Japan, Philippines and Australian operation to replace the rusted out wreck
with a new outpost and supply it over time would reverse Chinese momentum in
region and re-establish legally-sound international boundaries.
But the next
step is just a phone call.
Michael
Shoebridge is Director of Strategic Analysis Australia.
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