Chinese scholar offers insight into Beijing’s strategic mindset atimes.com
   					 				Essay by security expert Professor Zhang Wenmu gives a glimpse of  China's geostrategic outlook, from the 'Western Pacific Chinese Sea' to  the far side of the moon			 						  										By  Pepe Escobar 						 								January 5, 2019 11:58 AM (UTC+8) 			 				 					 					
   Chinese  President Xi Jinping reviews troops from a car during a military parade  in Hong Kong on June 30, 2017. China's status in the world has changed  under Xi and he's only just getting started. Photo: AFP/Anthony Wallace
     Now the new game hits high gear; it’s the US against the Russia-China strategic partnership.
   		 Diplomatic capers, tactical retreats, psychological, economic, cyber  and even outer space duels, all enveloped in media hysteria, will  continue to rule the news cycle. Be prepared for all shades of carping  about  authoritarian China,  and its “malign” association with an “illiberal” Russian bogeyman bent  on blasting the borders of Europe and “disrupting” the Middle East.
   Relatively sound minds like the  political scientist Joseph Nye  will continue to lament the sun setting on the Western liberal “order,”  without realizing that what was able to “secure and stabilize the world  over the past seven decades” does not translate into a “strong  consensus … defending, deepening and extending this system.” The Global  South overwhelmingly begs to differ, arguing that the current “order”  was manufactured and largely benefits only US interests.
   Expect exceptionalists to operate in condescending overdrive,  exhorting somewhat reluctant “allies” to help “constrain” if not contain  China and “channel” – as in control – Beijing’s increasing global  clout.
   It’s a full-time job to “channel” China into finding its “right”  place in a new world order. What does the Chinese intellectual elite  really think about all this?
   Never fight on two fronts An unparalleled roadmap may be provided by Zhang Wenmu, national  security strategy expert and professor at the Center of Strategic  Studies of the University of Aeronautics and Astronautics in Beijing,  who wrote an essay published in August 2017 in the Chinese magazine Taipingyan Xuebao (Pacific magazine), that was translated recently into Italian by Rome-based geopolitical magazine Limes.
   “Geopolitics” may be an Anglo invention, arguably by Sir Halford  Mackinder, but it has been studied in China for centuries as, for  instance, “geographic advantage” (xingsheng) or “historic geography” (lishi dili).
   Wenmu introduces us to the concept of geopolitics as philosophy on  the tip of a knife, but it’s mostly about philosophy, not the knife. If  we want to use the knife we must use philosophy to know the limits of  our power. Call it a Sino-equivalent of Nietzsche’s philosophizing with a  hammer.
   As a geopolitical analyst, Wenmu cannot but remind us that the  trademark Roman or British empires’ ‘divide and rule’ is also  a well-known tactic in China. For instance, in early 1972, Chairman Mao  was quite ready to welcome Richard Nixon. Later, in July, Mao revealed  his hand: “One must profit from the conflict between two powers, that is  our policy. But we must get closer to one of them and not fight on two  fronts.” He was referring to the split between China and the USSR.
    		      		   	 	  		    	 China’s Chairman Mao Zedong (left)  welcomes US President Richard Nixon to his house in Beijing on February  22, 1972. Photo: AFP/Xinhua  		      Wenmu gets a real kick out of how Western geopolitics usually plays  things wrong. He stresses how Halford Mackinder, the Englishman regarded  as one of the founders of geostrategy, “influenced World War II and the  subsequent decline of the British Empire,” noting how Mackinder died  only five months before Partition between India and Pakistan in 1947.
   He destroys George Kennan’s theory of the Cold War, “directly based  on Mackinder’s thinking,” and how it led the US to fight in Korea and  Vietnam, “accelerating its decline.”
   Even Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former US national security advisor,  “saw the decline of the American empire,” as he died recently, in May  2017. “In that moment, China and Russia gave life to a strategic  collaboration always closer and invincible.” Wenmu is positively  gleeful. “If Brzezinski was still alive, I think he would see the ‘great  defeat’ of the Western world – the opposite of what he wrote.”
   Why Tibet matters Chinese geopolitics predictably pays close attention to the tension  between sea powers and land powers. Wenmu notes how, in the Indian  Ocean, the British Empire enjoyed more naval power compared to the  Americans “because it occupied the homonymous continent. And because it  dominated the seas, the United Kingdom also threatened the Russian  Empire, which was a land power.”
   Wenmu quotes from Alfred Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power Upon History  on the reciprocal influence between control of the seas and control of  the land. But, he adds: “Mahan did not analyze this relation on a global  level … Based on the priorities of the United States, he concentrated  most of all on distant seas.”
    		      		   	 	  		    	 The Tibetan plateau is strategically located. Photo: AFP  		      Wenmu crucially stresses how the Pacific Ocean is the “obligatory  passage of the Maritime Silk Road.” Even though China “developed its  naval capacity much later, it enjoys [a] geographical advantage in  relation to the UK and the US.” And with that, he brings us to the  essential Tibet question.
   One of Wenmu’s key points is how “the Tibetan plateau allows the  People’s Republic to access the resources respectively of the Pacific  Ocean to the east and those of the Indian Ocean in the west. If from the  plateau we look at the American base in Diego Garcia [in the center of  the Indian Ocean] we can’t have any doubts about the natural advantage  of Chinese geopolitics.” The implication is that the UK and US must  “consume a great deal of resources to cross the oceans and develop a  chain of islands.”
   Wenmu shows how the geography of the Tibetan plateau “links in a  natural way the Tibetan region to the dominant power in the Chinese  central plains” while it does “not link it to the countries in the South  Asia subcontinent.” Thus Tibet should be considered as a “natural part  of China.”
   China is supported by the continental plaque, “which it controls  along its coast,” and “possesses technology of medium and long-range  missile attack,” guaranteeing it virtually a “great capacity of reaction  in both oceans” with a “relatively powerful naval force.” And that’s  how China, as Wenmu maps it, is able to compensate – “to a certain  extent” – the technological gap relative to the West.
   Wenmu’s most controversial point is that “the advantage that only  China enjoys of linking to markets of two oceans crashes the myth of  Western ‘naval power’ in the contemporary era and introduces a  revolutionary vision; the People’s Republic is a great nation who  possesses by nature the qualification of naval power.” We just need to  compare “how industrial development allowed the West to navigate towards  the Indian Ocean” while China “arrived on foot.”
   Get Taiwan  President Obama was keen to exhort at every opportunity the status of  the US as a “Pacific nation.” Imagine the US confronted by Wenmu’s  description: “The Western Pacific is linked to the national interests of  the People’s Republic and is the starting point of the New Maritime  Silk Road.” In fact, Chairman Mao talked about it way back in 1959: “One  day, it does not matter when, the United States will have to retire  from the rest of the world and will have to abandon the Western  Pacific.”
   Extrapolating from Mao, Wenmu elaborates on a “Western Pacific  Chinese Sea” uniting the South China Sea, the East China Sea and the  Yellow Sea. “We can use the formula ‘southern zone of the Western  Pacific Chinese Sea’ to describe the part that falls under Chinese  sovereignty.”
   This suggests a combination of Chinese forces in the South China Sea,  the East China Sea and the Yellow Sea under a sole Western Pacific  naval command.
    		      		   	 	  		    	 Chinese President Xi Jinping reviews  a military display of Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy in  the South China Sea on April 12, 2018. Photo: Reuters/Li Gang/Xinhua  		      It’s easy to see where all this is pointing: reunification with Taiwan.
   Under such a system, as delineated by Wenmu, Taiwan “would return to  the motherland,” China’s sovereignty over its coastline “would be  legitimated” and at the same time “would not be excessively extended.”
   Beijing’s supreme goal is to effectively move the “Chinese line of  control” to the east of Taiwan. That reflects President Xi Jinping’s  speech earlier this week, where he referred to Taiwan, for all practical  purposes, as the great prize. Wenmu frames it as an environment “where  Chinese nuclear submarines are able to counter-attack, the construction  of aircraft carriers can progress and products made in continental China  may be exported effectively.”
   The barycenter of Asia  One of the most fascinating arguments in Wenmu’s essay is how he  shows there’s always a natural proportion – a sort of ‘divine’ or  ‘golden ratio’ between the three strategic powers in Eurasia: Europe, Central Asia and China.
   Cue to a fast tour of the rise and fall of empires, with “history  showing how in the main zone of the continent – between 30 and 60  degrees of north[ern] latitude – there can be only 2.5 strategic  forces.” Which means one of the three major spaces always becomes  fragmented.
   In modern times it has been rare that one of the three powers  “managed to expand to a 1.5 ratio.” Before, only the Tang empire and the  Mongol empire came close. The British Empire, Tsarist Russia and the  USSR “invaded Afghanistan and entered Central Asia, but success, when it  happened, was short-lived.”
   That paved the way to Wenmu’s clincher: “The law of the aurea section [Latin for  ‘golden’ section] as the base of strategic power in Eurasia helps us to  understand the causes of alternate rise and decline of powers in the  continent and to recognize the limits of expansion of Chinese power in  Central Asia. To understand it is the premise of mature and successful  diplomacy.”
   Although this cannot be seriously depicted as a roadmap for “Chinese  aggression,” Wenmu cannot help but direct another hit at Western  geopolitical stalwart Mackinder: “With his genius imagination, Mackinder  advanced the wrong theory of the ‘geographic pivot’ because he did not  consider this law.”
   In a nutshell, China is key for the equilibrium of Eurasia. “In  Europe, the fragmented zone originates in the center, in Asia, it is  around China. So that presents China as the natural barycenter of Asia.”
   Dark side of the moon It’s easy to imagine Wenmu’s essay provoking ballistic responses from proponents of the US  National Security Strategy which labels China, as well as Russia, as a dangerous “revisionist power.”
   Professional Sinophobes are even peddling the notion that a “failing  China” might eventually “lash out” against the US. That’s a misreading  of what Rear Admiral Luo Yuan  said last  month in Shenzhen: “We now have Dong Feng-21D, Dong Feng-26 missiles.  These are aircraft carrier killers. We attack and sink one of their  aircraft carriers. Let them suffer 5,000 casualties. Attack and sink two  carriers, casualties 10,000. Let’s see if the US is afraid or not?”
   This is a statement of fact, not a threat. The Pentagon knows all there is to know about ‘carrier killer’ danger.
   Beijing won’t stop with carrier killers, the rebranded Western Pacific and reunification with Taiwan. It is planning the  first artificial intelligence (AI) colony on earth – a deep-sea base for unmanned submarine science and defense ops in the South China Sea.
    		      		   	 	  		    	 China’s robotic lunar rover goes for a spin on the dark side of the moon. Photo: AFP/China National Space Administration  		      The landing of the Chang’e 4 lunar probe on the far side of the moon  could even be interpreted as the most extreme extension of the Belt and  Road Initiative (BRI).
   These are all pieces in a massive puzzle bound to reinforce the grip of a new – Sinocentric –  map of the world,  already in use by the Chinese navy and published in 2013, not by  accident the year when the New Silk Roads were announced in Astana and  Jakarta.
   Wenmu ends his essay stressing how “Chinese geopolitics must distance  itself from the idea that ‘one cannot open his mouth without mentioning  Ancient Greece’.” That’s a reference to a famous Mao speech of May  1941, when the Chairman criticized certain Marxist-Leninists who  privileged Western history – of which Ancient Greece is the ultimate  symbol – over Chinese history.
   Thucydides trap? What trap? |