How Sentiment Matters in International Relations: China and the South China Sea Dispute. David GrotenЧитать онлайн книгу.
(Taiwan), east of Vietnam, west of the Philippines and north of Malaysia and Brunei. To be clear, the term South China Sea (hereafter SCS) is by no means used in any uniform manner. Whereas in China, Nanhai Zhudao is the most prominent term, which in its literal translation means south sea, Biển Đông, which translates as the east sea, is more common in Vietnam. Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines had adopted the term ‘South China Sea’ until the Philippines, in the wake of its dispute with the PRC regarding the Spratly Archipelagos in 2011, began to prefer the term ‘West Philippine Sea’97. Even though the SCS and in particular the area surrounding its two most important archipelagos Spratly and Paracel, have largely been frequented for many centuries by fishermen of nearby countries, they have received profound attention in recent years and are at the center of a significant proliferation of tensions. This general development raises several crucial questions as to the roots and origins of the dispute. Similarly, it begs questions regarding the significance of the SCS at large. First and foremost, the SCS – connecting the Indian Ocean with the Pacific – is one of the world’s most strategic waters. Its bordering chokepoints such as the Strait of Malacca witness roughly one-third of global maritime traffic passing through per annum. It is said that almost 60 percent of the energy supplies of both Taiwan and Japan, 80 percent of China’s imports of crude oil and 66 percent of South Korean energy supplies are transported through SCS waters (CSIS, 2017; IMF, 2016).
The SCS also serves as a source of natural resources itself: oil reserves of 7 billion barrels have been verified, contested estimates even suggest quantities of up to 130 billion barrels of oil and 900 trillion cubic feet of natural gas (International Crisis Group (ICG), 2015; Reed, 2014).
[66] Figure 2: Map of the South China Sea Cambridge University Press, n.d.
[67] To be sure, energy sources represent just one out of several categories of goods that are regularly shipped through the SCS. Its unique strategic location in Eurasia at the heart of international trading routes and its rich amount of natural resources that provide the SCS with geo-economic and geostrategic importance further render the settlement of multiple legal and political disputes that already prevail among bordering SCS claimant states difficult. That said, the SCS claimant parties Malaysia, China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Vietnam and Brunei all raise overlapping and competing claims to territorial sovereignty and/or maritime borders, many of which have been enforced in recent years. Taking all these (mostly bilateral) disputes together, the SCS showcases a multidimensional and multifaceted conflict over ‘islands98 and waters’ (cf. Samuels, 2013). To be sure, apart from water, the SCS also comprises more than 200 small or very small features (rocks, coral reefs, islets, islands) of which less than 25 percent actually constantly remain above the sea level at high tide99. The ownership of roughly each of these features is heavily contested and simultaneously claimed by at least two parties. To illustrate, the Philippines claims eight features (Spratly Archipelago) and exclusive economic zones (EEZ) around what it regards as islands, Malaysia three (Spratly Archipelago), while Vietnam, Taiwan and the PRC demand ownership over the entire Spratly and Paracel archipelagos. However, while Taiwan and the PRC also claim the waters around the archipelagoes (and roughly 80 percent of the entire SCS waters), Vietnam does not raise any claim to waters beyond the Spratlys or Paracels.
To further complicate the issue, several non-claimant parties, particularly the United States of America (U.S.), Japan and ASEAN Member States such as Indonesia have also expressed strong interests in the SCS and its disputes. As a result, the SCS dispute is by no means limited to adjacent states. The fragile and complex security context in East and Southeast Asia, characterized by a lack of structures of cooperative security, prevailing strategic alliances and partnerships – for instance between the U.S. and the Philippines – and the SCS’s strategic importance serve as grounds of the SCS’s global outreach. Globalization processes, structural changes and the wider context in which the SCS is embedded in further contribute to the SCS’s international significance, in particular, shifts in both regional and international balance of power and global order, considerably in favor of rising China.
[68] Against this backdrop, the SCS conflict, no matter how long-standing some of its subordinated disputes are, has recently attracted a considerable amount of attention. While a majority of territorial and maritime border claims of the claimant parties date back to the 1940s and 1950s (or even before), the dispute had not become a pressing issue prior to the early 1970s. This process can be attributed to a number of developments. Crucial events certainly were the San Francisco Peace Conference in 1951 and the San Francisco Peace Treaty, which entered into force in 1952 and put an end to the Second World War in Asia. Neither the People’s Republic of China (PRC) nor the Republic of China (ROC) was invited to the conference. This was the result of the ongoing second part of the Chinese Civil War (1946–1950) and the still unresolved governmental legitimacy question as to whether the PRC or the ROC officially represented China. In the wake of this peace conference, Japan – in line with the Potsdam Declaration and Cairo Declaration – was prompted to renounce its entire claims over the Spratly and Paracel archipelagoes. However, these features were not officially reassigned to any other country and the question of ownership was left unresolved100. In addition, on August 15, 1951, Zhou Enlai, former Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs, officially opposed the peace treaty’s provisions, rejected its legally binding character for the PRC and declared the PRC’s sovereignty over the Paracels, Spratlys and Pratas.
A second and arguably even more decisive event that explains the renewed interest in the SCS was a report by the UN Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East published in 1969. Therein, the committee reported that it is highly likely that vast oil reserves are located in the Yellow Sea and the South China Sea. This finding caught the attention of several SCS resident states, which consequentially began to exert claims regarding their continental shelf boundaries and started to publicly emphasize their maritime and territorial claims on a much more regular and specific basis. Naturally, this resulted in heated debate and a number of incidents in areas of competing claims.
A third and subsequent event responsible for placing the SCS dispute higher on the political agenda was a deadline (May 13, 2009) set by the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS), by which claimant states to the SCS had to submit information to the CLCS on whether they intended to make a claim for an extended continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles under Art. 76 (8) UNCLOS. As a consequence, the Philippines passed its Archipelagic Baseline Law in February 2009, Malaysia and Vietnam (and [69] Vietnam alone) made joint submissions to the CLCS, and China submitted a much-noted note verbale in response (cf. chapter 4.3).
A fourth event that accounted for recent turmoil was the Philippines’ decision in January 2013 to invoke the compulsory settlement of dispute clause under the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention (UNCLOS) by submitting a case against China over competing South China Sea claims to the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PRC) in The Hague. This action was met with particularly harsh critique from the Chinese side that since has been entirely rejecting the Arbitral Tribunal’s jurisdiction on that matter as well as all claims raised by the Philippines (cf. chapter 4.3).
In a nutshell, absent of a cooperative security framework and triggered by a growing vested interest in the SCS as a whole, tensions have been looming large ever since. Accordingly, the number of diplomatic, economic and military incidents greatly increased in scale, reaching from PRC artificial island creation efforts, the launch of U.S. freedom of navigation operations (FONOPS) in the SCS, Indonesia declaring its intention to file a case against China’s claims over Natuna Islands (November 14, 2015), multiple military encounters (e.g. Scarborough Shoal standoff between the PRC and the Philippines (2012)) and diplomatic standoffs (e.g. the so-called Hai Yang Shi You 981 (oilrig) incident between the PRC and Vietnam (2014)), and numerous diplomatic undertakings and discussions in the framework of regional institutions (APEC, ASEAN and East Asia summit) on related subjects. Ultimately, in times of shifting regional and global order and growing nationalist sentiment, territorial sovereignty and border delimitation, the SCS has become an issue of international prestige, domestic legitimacy, national reputation and status.
Table 2: Legal Background at a Glance