The
State of the World: Assessing China's Strategy
By George Friedman - March 6, 2012
Simply put, China has three core strategic interests.
Paramount among them is the maintenance of domestic security.
Historically, when China involves itself in global trade, as it did in the 19th
and early 20th centuries, the coastal region prospers, while the interior of
China -- which begins about 160 kilometers (100 miles) from the coast and runs
about 1,600 kilometers to the west -- languishes. Roughly 80 percent of all
Chinese citizens currently have household incomes lower than the average
household income in Bolivia. Most of China's poor are located west of the richer
coastal region. This disparity of wealth time and again has exposed tensions
between the interests of the coast and those of the interior. After a failed
rising in Shanghai in 1927, Mao Zedong exploited these tensions by undertaking
the Long March into the interior, raising a peasant army and ultimately
conquering the coastal region. He shut China off from the international trading
system, leaving China more united and equal, but extremely poor.
The current government has sought a more wealth-friendly means of
achieving stability: buying popular loyalty with mass employment. Plans for
industrial expansion are implemented with little thought to markets or margins;
instead, maximum employment is the driving goal. Private savings are harnessed
to finance the industrial effort, leaving little domestic capital to purchase
the output. China must export accordingly.
China's second strategic concern derives from the first. China's
industrial base by design produces more than its domestic economy can consume,
so China must export goods to the rest of the world while importing raw
materials. The Chinese therefore must do everything possible to ensure
international demand for their exports. This includes a range of activities,
from investing money in the economies of consumer countries to establishing
unfettered access to global sea-lanes.
The third strategic interest is in maintaining control over buffer
states. The population of the historical Han Chinese heartland is clustered in
the eastern third of the country, where ample precipitation distinguishes it
from the much more dry and arid central and western thirds. China's physical
security therefore depends on controlling the four non-Han Chinese buffer
states that surround it: Manchuria, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and Tibet.
Securing these regions means China can insulate itself from Russia to the
north, any attack from the western steppes, and any attack from India or
Southeast Asia.
Controlling the buffer states provides China geographical barriers --
jungles, mountains, steppes and the Siberian wasteland -- that are difficult to
surmount and creates a defense in depth that puts any attacker at a grave
disadvantage.
Challenged Interests
Today, China faces challenges to all three of these interests.
The economic downturn in Europe and the United States, China's two main
customers, has exposed Chinese exports to increased competition and decreased
appetite. Meanwhile, China has been unable to appropriately increase domestic
demand and guarantee access to global sea-lanes independent of what the U.S.
Navy is willing to allow.
Those same economic stresses also challenge China domestically. The
wealthier coast depends on trade that is now faltering, and the impoverished
interior requires subsidies that are difficult to provide when economic growth
is slowing substantially.
In addition, two of China's buffer regions are in flux. Elements within
Tibet and Xinjiang adamantly resist Han Chinese occupation. China understands
that the loss of these regions could pose severe threats to China's security,
particularly if such losses would draw India north of the Himalayas or create a
radical Islamic regime in Xinjiang.
The situation in Tibet is potentially the most troubling. Outright war
between India and China -- anything beyond minor skirmishes -- is impossible so
long as both are separated by the Himalayas. Neither side could logistically
sustain large-scale multi-divisional warfare in that terrain. But China and
India could threaten one another if they were to cross the Himalayas and
establish a military presence on the either side of the mountain chain. For
India, the threat would emerge if Chinese forces entered Pakistan in large
numbers. For China, the threat would occur if large numbers of Indian troops
entered Tibet.
China therefore constantly postures as if it were going to send large
numbers of forces into Pakistan, but in the end, the Pakistanis have no
interest in de facto Chinese occupation -- even if the occupation were directed
against India. Likewise, the Chinese are not interested in undertaking security
operations in Pakistan. The Indians have little interest in sending forces into
Tibet in the event of a Tibetan revolution. For India, an independent Tibet
without Chinese forces would be interesting, but a Tibet where the Indians
would have to commit significant forces would not be. As much as the Tibetans
represent a problem for China, the problem is manageable. Tibetan insurgents
might receive some minimal encouragement and support from India, but not to a
degree that would threaten Chinese control.
So long as the internal problems in Han China are manageable, so is
Chinese domination of the buffer states, albeit with some effort and some
damage to China's reputation abroad.
The key for China is maintaining interior stability. If this portion of
Han China destabilizes, control of the buffers becomes impossible. Maintaining
interior stability requires the transfer of resources, which in turn requires
the continued robust growth of the Chinese coastal economy to generate the
capital to transfer inland. Should exports stop flowing out and raw materials
in, incomes in the interior would quickly fall to politically explosive levels.
(China today is far from revolution, but social tensions are increasing, and
China must use its security apparatus and the People's Liberation Army to
control these tensions.)
Maintaining those flows is a considerable challenge. The very model of
employment and market share over profitability misallocates scores of resources
and breaks the normally self-regulating link between supply and demand. One of the more disruptive
results is inflation, which alternatively raises the costs of subsidizing the
interior while eroding China's competitiveness with other low-cost global
exporters.
For the
Chinese, this represents a strategic challenge, a challenge that can only be
countered by increasing the profitability on Chinese economic activity. This is
nearly impossible for low value-added producers. The solution is to begin
manufacturing higher value-added products (fewer shoes, more cars), but this
necessitates a different sort of work force, one with years more education and
training than the average Chinese coastal inhabitant, much less someone from
the interior. It also requires direct competition with the well-established
economies of Japan, Germany and the United States. This is the strategic
battleground that China must attack if it is to maintain its stability.
A Military Component
Besides
the issues with its economic model, China also faces a primarily military
problem. China depends on the high seas to survive. The configuration of the
South China Sea and the East China Sea render China relatively easy to
blockade. The East China Sea is enclosed on a line from Korea to Japan to
Taiwan, with a string of islands between Japan and Taiwan. The South China Sea
is even more enclosed on a line from Taiwan to the Philippines, and from
Indonesia to Singapore. Beijing's single greatest strategic concern is that the
United States would impose a blockade on China, not by positioning its 7th
Fleet inside the two island barriers but outside them. From there, the United
States could compel China to send its naval forces far away from the mainland
to force an opening -- and encounter U.S. warships -- and still be able to
close off China's exits.
That
China does not have a navy capable of challenging the United States compounds
the problem. China is still in the process of completing its first aircraft
carrier; indeed, its navy is insufficient in size and quality to challenge the
United States. But naval hardware is not China's greatest challenge. The United
States commissioned its first aircraft carrier in 1922 and has been refining
both carrier aviation and battle group tactics ever since. Developing admirals
and staffs capable of commanding carrier battle groups takes generations. Since
the Chinese have never had a carrier battle group in the first place, they have
never had an admiral commanding a carrier battle group.
China
understands this problem and has chosen a different strategy to deter a U.S.
naval blockade: anti-ship missiles capable of engaging and perhaps penetrating
U.S. carrier defensive systems, along with a substantial submarine presence.
The United States has no desire to engage the Chinese at all, but were this to
change, the Chinese response would be fraught with difficulty.
While
China has a robust land-based missile system, a land-based missile system is
inherently vulnerable to strikes by cruise missiles, aircraft, unmanned aerial
vehicles currently in development and other types of attack. China's ability to
fight a sustained battle is limited. Moreover, a missile strategy works only
with an effective reconnaissance capability. You cannot destroy a ship if you
do not know where it is. This in turn necessitates space-based systems able to
identify U.S. ships and a tightly integrated fire-control system. That raises
the question of whether the United States has an anti-satellite capability. We
would assume that it does, and if the United States used it, it would leave
China blind.
China is
therefore supplementing this strategy by acquiring port access in countries in
the Indian Ocean and outside the South China Sea box. Beijing has plans to
build ports in Myanmar, which is flirting with ending its international
isolation, and Pakistan. Beijing already has financed and developed port access
to Gwadar in Pakistan, Colombo and Hambantota in Sri Lanka, Chittagong in
Bangladesh, and it has hopes for a deepwater port at Sittwe, Myanmar. In order
for this strategy to work, China needs transportation infrastructure linking
China to the ports. This means extensive rail and road systems. The difficulty
of building this in Myanmar, for example, should not be underestimated.
But more
important, China needs to maintain political relationships that will allow it
to access the ports. Pakistan and Myanmar, for example, have a degree of
instability, and China cannot assume that cooperative governments will always
be in place in such countries. In Myanmar's case, recent political openings
could result in Naypyidaw's falling out of China's sphere of influence.
Building a port and roads and finding that a coup or an election has created an
anti-Chinese government is a possibility. Given that this is one of China's
fundamental strategic interests, Beijing cannot simply assume that building a
port will give it unrestricted access to the port. Add to this that roads and
rail lines are easily sabotaged by guerrilla forces or destroyed by air or
missile attacks.
In order
for the ports on the Indian Ocean to prove useful, Beijing must be confident in
its ability to control the political situation in the host country for a long
time. That sort of extended control can only be guaranteed by having
overwhelming power available to force access to the ports and the
transportation system. It is important to bear in mind that since the
Communists took power, China has undertaken offensive military operations
infrequently -- and to undesirable results. Its invasion of Tibet was
successful, but it was met with minimal effective resistance. Its intervention
in Korea did achieve a stalemate but at horrendous cost to the Chinese, who
endured the losses but became very cautious in the future. In 1979, China
attacked Vietnam but suffered a significant defeat. China has managed to
project an image of itself as a competent military force, but in reality it has
had little experience in force projection, and that experience has not been
pleasant.
Internal Security vs. Power Projection
The
reason for this inexperience stems from internal security. The People's
Liberation Army (PLA) is primarily configured as a domestic security force -- a
necessity because of China's history of internal tensions. It is not a question
of whether China is currently experiencing such tensions; it is a question of
possibility. Prudent strategic planning requires building forces to deal with
worst-case situations. Having been designed for internal security, the PLA is
doctrinally and logistically disinclined toward offensive operations. Using a
force trained for security as a force for offensive operations leads either to
defeat or very painful stalemates. And given the size of China's potential
internal issues and the challenge of occupying a country like Myanmar, let
alone Pakistan, building a secondary force of sufficient capability might not
outstrip China's available manpower but would certainly outstrip its command
and logistical capabilities. The PLA was built to control China, not to project
power outward, and strategies built around the potential need for power
projection are risky at best.
It should
be noted that since the 1980s the Chinese have been attempting to transfer
internal security responsibilities to the People's Armed Police, the border
forces and other internal security forces that have been expanded and trained
to deal with social instability. But despite this restructuring, there remain
enormous limitations on China's ability to project military power on a scale
sufficient to challenge the United States directly.
There is
a disjuncture between the perception of China as a regional power and the
reality. China can control its interior, but its ability to control its
neighbors through military force is limited. Indeed, the fear of a Chinese
invasion of Taiwan is unfounded. It cannot mount an amphibious assault at that
distance, let alone sustain extended combat logistically. One option China does
have is surrogate guerrilla warfare in places like the Philippines or
Indonesia. The problem with such warfare is that China needs to open sea-lanes,
and guerrillas -- even guerrillas armed with anti-ship missiles or mines -- can
at best close them.
Political Solution
China
therefore faces a significant strategic problem. China must base its national
security strategy on what the United States is capable of doing, not on what
Beijing seems to want at the moment. China cannot counter the United States at
sea, and its strategy of building ports in the Indian Ocean suffers from the
fact that its costs are huge and the political conditions for access uncertain.
The demands of creating a force capable of guaranteeing access runs counter to
the security requirements inside China itself.
As long
as the United States is the world's dominant naval power, China's strategy must
be the political neutralization of the United States. But Beijing must make
certain that Washington does not feel so pressured that it chooses blockade as
an option. Therefore, China must present itself as an essential part of U.S.
economic life. But the United States does not necessarily see China's economic
activity as beneficial, and it is unclear whether China can maintain its unique
position with the United States indefinitely. Other, cheaper alternatives are
available. China's official rhetoric and hard-line stances, designed to
generate nationalist support inside the country, might be useful politically,
but they strain relations with the United States. They do not strain relations
to the point of risking military conflict, but given China's weakness, any
strain is dangerous. The Chinese feel they know how to walk the line between
rhetoric and real danger with the United States. It is still a delicate balance.
There is
a perception that China is a rising regional and even global power. It may be
rising, but it is still far from solving its fundamental strategic problems and
further yet from challenging the United States. The tensions within China's
strategy are certainly debilitating, if not fatal. All of its options have
serious weaknesses. China's real strategy must be to avoid having to make risky
strategic choices. China has been fortunate for the past 30 years being able to
avoid such decisions, but Beijing utterly lacks the tools required to reshape
that environment. Considering how much of China's world is in play right now --
Sudanese energy disputes and Myanmar's political experimentation leap to mind
-- this is essentially a policy of blind hope.
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