A very interesting article from the Strait times of Singapore looking at China's tactics in South-east Asia so far and pondering the prospect of a Sino-US pact on the South China Sea ahead the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue on Friday.
http://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/why-chinas-salami-slicing-in-south-china-sea-is-bad-news
Some highlights of the article:
But what is worrying is an implicit agreement between China and the US over the South China Sea. Dr Michael Swaine, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said such an understanding would centre on the US not staking its credibility on ensuring that a non-coercive process is followed in the South China Sea; China would privately state that the area within the nine-dash line is open ocean.
If this happens, smaller Asian nations would rue the costs. As Singapore's veteran diplomat, Mr Bilahari Kausikan, notes, small countries would "pay the price" when big countries reach an agreement. Think Taiwan in the 1970s, when it was at the losing end of Sino-American rapprochement.
A Sino-US compact chills the bone, but it is not unthinkable. Speaking at a private function last year, a senior Chinese diplomat said that South-east Asian governments would face adverse consequences if they continued to criticise China's South China Sea activities.
This could take the form of reduced Chinese investment and the possibility of a Sino-American agreement on the South China Sea, say Dr Tim Huxley and Dr Benjamin Schreer, writing in the January edition of the IISS journal Survival.
http://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/why-chinas-salami-slicing-in-south-china-sea-is-bad-news
Some highlights of the article:
But what is worrying is an implicit agreement between China and the US over the South China Sea. Dr Michael Swaine, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said such an understanding would centre on the US not staking its credibility on ensuring that a non-coercive process is followed in the South China Sea; China would privately state that the area within the nine-dash line is open ocean.
If this happens, smaller Asian nations would rue the costs. As Singapore's veteran diplomat, Mr Bilahari Kausikan, notes, small countries would "pay the price" when big countries reach an agreement. Think Taiwan in the 1970s, when it was at the losing end of Sino-American rapprochement.
A Sino-US compact chills the bone, but it is not unthinkable. Speaking at a private function last year, a senior Chinese diplomat said that South-east Asian governments would face adverse consequences if they continued to criticise China's South China Sea activities.
This could take the form of reduced Chinese investment and the possibility of a Sino-American agreement on the South China Sea, say Dr Tim Huxley and Dr Benjamin Schreer, writing in the January edition of the IISS journal Survival.