Why Did China Set Up an Oil Rig Within Vietnamese Waters? ○The
Diplomat(2014.05.13)http://thediplomat.com/2014/05/why-did-china-set-up-an-oil-rig-within-vietnamese-waters/
Why now and why Vietnam?
The who, what, where, when and how of China’s HD-981 oil rig
foray into Vietnamese waters have been addressed comprehensively, both by commentators here at The Diplomat and elsewhere.
The
enduring question, as with many of China’s provocative actions in the
Asia-Pacific, remains why? The
opacity of China’s internal decision-making processes makes it rather difficult
to conclusively answer that question, but a good amount of evidence suggests
that the oil rig crisis with Vietnam was
manufactured to test the mettle of ASEAN states and the United States. It gives Beijing an opportunity to gauge the
international response to China asserting its maritime territorial claims.
As Carl Thayer points out on this blog and M. Taylor Fravel said in an interview with The New York
Times, the China National Offshore Oil Company’s decision to move oil
rig HD-981 was a premeditated move of territorial
assertion. CNOOC may be a
state-owned enterprise but the decision to move this $1 billion asset into an area with questionable
hydrocarbon reserves while also inciting a diplomatic crisis speaks to
the planned, political nature of this move. The fact that approximately
80 PLAN and Chinese coast guard ships accompanied the rig reinforces the
notion that China was making a strategic push to assert its territorial claims
in the region.
The question of why
China chose to escalate with Vietnam specifically is perhaps slightly easier to
answer. Several analysts have already
noted that China caught the world off-guard by choosing to escalate its
territorial dispute with Vietnam given that relations between the two countries
were improving as recently as fall 2013. Additionally, a certain degree of camaraderie
exists between the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) and the Chinese Communist
Party (CCP). For
China to suddenly risk a relatively stable bilateral relationship through an
underlying rivalry seemed brazen and irresponsible.
On
the contrary, if China had to push any dispute in the South China Sea to test
the mettle of the United States and ASEAN, Vietnam was perhaps the most fitting
candidate. As Tuong Vu
told the New York Times, a political debate
exists within Vietnam about whether the country should remain close to
China or pursue closer relations with the west, with the former faction
wielding considerably more influence. With this in mind, China gambled with a good
degree of confidence that despite the oil rig provocation, Vietnam would respond with rhetoric and restraint — not
force.
To this end, only
Chinese coast guard vessels rammed Vietnamese ships and hit them with water
cannons — the PLAN remained in a support function, ensuring that whatever
kinetic coercion was used was not explicitly originating from a military vessel
(although Vietnam did not entirely buy this interpretation). Furthermore, before China can begin trying its
luck with U.S. allies in the region, such
the Philippines, which recently signed a ten-year defense facility sharing deal
with the United States, it must see if the United
States is willing to defend its self-stated interests in the region.
Whereas with the
Philippines, South Korea, and Japan the United States is treaty-bound to take
action, in the case of other disputes in the South China Sea, particularly the
Paracel Islands dispute between Vietnam and China, all the United States has to
do is demonstrate that it is willing to stand up
for the interests it has identified in the past, including freedom of
navigation, the peaceful resolution of all conflicts, and the non-use of
coercion and intimidation in disputes. With HD-981, China
has challenged the United States on all three. Additionally, given ExxonMobil’s
interests in the waters, HD-981 is also impeding U.S. commercial
interests in the region. So far, the
United States’ response — a
statement calling China’s behavior “provocative” — is
insufficiently costly to China to deter such behavior in the future.
Finally, China
timed this coercive move as U.S. President Barack Obama
left Asia and just prior to the meeting of ASEAN Heads of Government/State in
Naypyidaw, Myanmar this past weekend. In
doing so, China was taking a risk: the move would
doubtless draw massive international attention and condemnation. However, as the ASEAN Summit statement
demonstrates, China still has an assurance that
regional leaders are insufficiently united to put forth a joint front against
Chinese coercion in the South China Sea. While it is significant
that ASEAN Foreign Ministers issued a separate
statement, the “internationalization” of disputes that China dreads has not yet come to pass (and likely will
not anytime soon).
Similarly, as the
United States grows old, weary and underfunded as the global policeman, this
oil rig debacle sits in the same category of global crises as Syria and Ukraine
— just without the same sort of political urgency. By avoiding a U.S. treaty ally or major
partner, China seeks to paint the U.S. as unable to assert its interests in the
region. A
negative consequence of this is that other states engaged in territorial
disputes with China will seek to unilaterally militarize to offset their
reliance on U.S. security guarantees, potentially creating a headache for China
later in the future.
The
decision to move oil rig HD-981 into disputed waters matches China’s decision
to impose an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) over the East China Sea in
terms of signaling China’s appetite to unilaterally pursue its maritime
territorial claims. China
has said that the oil rig will remain in these
waters until August this year. What
ultimately sets this episode apart from any other is that it is the first time China has placed an asset this
expensive within the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of another state. And Vietnam isn’t a pushover of a state either
— it has a more-than-modest maritime capacity that could result in an armed
altercation with China. Overall, in the past six months, we’ve seen China more assertive
than ever in pursuing its claims and, for the moment, it is succeeding.
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