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China Deploys Troops in South Sudan to Defend Oil Fields, Workers

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Dear World: Say Hello to the New World Policeman?

http://online.wsj.com/articles/chin...sudan-to-defend-oil-fields-workers-1410275041

China Deploys Troops in South Sudan to Defend Oil Fields, Workers
Deployment Marks Sharp Escalation in Beijing's Efforts to Protect Interests in Africa

By
NICHOLAS BARIYO
Updated Sept. 9, 2014 8:30 p.m. ET
BN-EL864_csudan_G_20140909223500.jpg

United Nations peacekeepers secure a section of Juba airport in South Sudan on Aug. 12. China has deployed soldiers to South Sudan to protect Chinese workers. Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

KAMPALA, Uganda—China began deploying 700 soldiers to a United Nations peacekeeping force in South Sudan to help guard the country's embattled oil fields and protect Chinese workers and installations, a spokesman for the African nation's president said Tuesday.

The airlift of the Chinese infantry battalion to the South Sudanese states of Unity and Upper Nile, the site of the only operating oil fields still under the control of the central government in Juba, was expected to take several days, spokesman Ateny Wek Ateny said.

While Beijing's troops will operate under U.N. command, their posting to South Sudan marks a sharp escalation of China's efforts to ensure the safety of its workers and assets in Africa and guarantee a steady flow of energy for domestic consumption.

The deployment marks the first time Beijing has contributed a battalion to a U.N. peacekeeping force, U.N. officials said.
In March 2013, China sent some 300 peacekeepers to Mali to protect Chinese engineers building a U.N. camp in the town of Gao.

Times of Trouble
Chinese workers face security threats at Africa installations.

  • Oct. 2008: Sudanese revbs grab 9 oil workers; weeks later, 5 are killed in a botched rescue
  • Jan. 2012: Sudanese rebels abduct 29 road workers; China negotiates their release
  • Feb. 2012: Bedouin militants in Egypt grab 25 cement-factory workers; hostages are released days later
  • May 2014: Suspected Boko Haram militants abduct 10 Chinese builders in Cameroon.
Source: WSJ staff reports

China's state-owned National Petroleum Corp. holds a 40% stake in a joint venture that operates in South Sudan's vast oil fields. The company also has a 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometer) export pipeline that carries crude through neighboring Sudan to Port Sudan on the Red Sea.

Before the latest fighting in South Sudan flared, the country accounted for 5% of China's crude imports, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Output has since plummeted by a third—to 160,000 barrels a day—following the outbreak of fighting late last year.

More than 10,000 people have been killed and some 1.5 million uprooted from their homes in South Sudan since fighting erupted in December between President Salva Kiir and forces loyal to his former vice president, Riek Machar.

The U.N. Mission in the Republic of South Sudan is authorized by the Security Council for up to 12,500 troops and 1,323 police personnel. As of July 31, it had a total of 11,389 soldiers, police and military liaison officers. Under its mandate, U.N. peacekeepers are allowed to use "all necessary means" to protect imperiled civilians at oil installations. If attacked, Mr. Ateny said, the Chinese soldiers are "combat-ready and can fight back."

Rebels fighting to depose Mr. Kiir's government have warned Beijing against taking sides in their fight.

"The Chinese should work under the mandate and command" of the U.N., said rebel spokesman James Gatdet Dak. "As long as they stick to that, we shall not have a problem with them."

The greater Sudan region has been a caldron of unrest for the past several years, with the kidnappings of Chinese workers by rebels in Sudan and civil war in South Sudan, which gained its independence from its northern neighbor in 2011.

Sudanese rebels in the South Kordofan region kidnapped dozens of Chinese road workers in 2012 and demanded that Beijing use its influence to compel the Khartoum government to halt an offensive against the rebels.

National Petroleum evacuated 97 of its staff from South Sudan's oil fields in December, shortly after Mr. Kiir accused Mr. Machar of launching a coup and fighting broke out. Since then, the forces of the two men have waged an 8-month battle, often over strategic oil fields.

China has sought diplomatically to ease tensions in the region. Beijing's envoys were key to resolving last year's oil export dispute between Sudan and South Sudan, which brought the two former civil-war foes to the brink of war.

But the outbreak of the current conflict presents Beijing with a new challenge.

Chinese officials have been working closely with western envoys to help end fighting between Mr. Kiir and his former vice president, even as both sides accuse the other of breaking cease-fire deals.
 
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Not world policeman,but just protect our interests and friends

When you have trade interests everywhere, when you have citizens everywhere, when you need to protect your resource flow from instability in remote regions... soon "our interests" and "world police" will be a distinction without a difference. Take it from a country that knows.
 
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I Know, but there are many private military that hired by chinese companies.
OK, that is done by most of companies!! If you have money you can create big army in Sudan
 
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When you have trade interests everywhere, when you have citizens everywhere, when you need to protect your resource flow from instability in remote regions... soon "our interests" and "world police" will be a distinction without a difference. Take it from a country that knows.
Chinese trade interests already everywhere,but we should careful,not all those trade interests worth using troops(and even send troops should be invited by our friends),and most important,we don't have an agenda to spread democracy,like you US do,so we don't care who in power
 
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When you have trade interests everywhere, when you have citizens everywhere, when you need to protect your resource flow from instability in remote regions... soon "our interests" and "world police" will be a distinction without a difference. Take it from a country that knows.
It is technically not a world police. Our troop is under UN command. We are simply beefing up the UN peace force. It is multilateral force. We are not going in as an independent PLA.
 
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Chinese trade interests already everywhere,but we should careful,not all those trade interests worth using troops(and even send troops should be invited by our friends),and most important,we don't have an agenda to spread democracy,like you US do,so we don't care who in power

Sometimes that helps, in that countries do not view China as a threat. Sometimes that harms, in that populations see that China doesn't care if the dictator oppresses the people, as long as the dictator sells resources to China. The problem arises when a civil war breaks out. If China supports the dictator, it will make an enemy of the people of that country. If China supports the people of the country, then it risks its resource flow should the dictator then win the civil war. In other words, as long as China is involved, it will find that it is drawn in, one way or another.

It's hard to believe that China would commit troops to a country as insignificant to its interests as South Sudan, but not commit troops someday to areas far more significant to its interests.

It is technically not a world police. Our troop is under UN command. We are simply beefing up the UN peace force. It is multilateral force. We are not going in as an independent PLA.

Right now, UN and Chinese interests converge. What happens when the UN is unwilling or unavailable to protect Chinese interests?
 
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@Nihonjin1051

I got a question, what the hell did Toyota do, when did Toyota pick ups become the official ride of rebels everywhere.
 
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Right now, UN and Chinese interests converge. What happens when the UN is unwilling or unavailable to protect Chinese interests?
Then we will move out. We operate under UN and prefer to work within that framework. For us, picking side in foreign conflict goes against our non-interference policy.
 
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Now China's "non-interference" clause starts to crumble as their world business interests (and people) become caught in the middle of unrest.China will soon see why the US ended up playing world policeman.
 
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@Nihonjin1051

I got a question, what the hell did Toyota do, when did Toyota pick ups become the official ride of rebels everywhere.

Toyota is known for its longevity, endurance and reliability. If individuals convert private vehicles for operational use, then, that's beyond our control.
 
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