Historical
Fiction: China’s South China Sea Claims
Mohan Malik
The Spratly Islands—not so long ago known primarily as a
rich fishing ground—have turned into an international flashpoint as Chinese
leaders insist with increasing truculence that the islands, rocks, and reefs
have been, in the words of Premier Wen Jiabao, “China’s historical territory
since ancient times.” Normally, the overlapping territorial claims to
sovereignty and maritime boundaries ought to be resolved through a
combination of customary international law, adjudication before the
International Court of Justice or the International Tribunal for the Law of
the Sea, or arbitration under Annex VII of the United Nations Convention on
the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). While China
has ratified UNCLOS, the treaty by and large rejects “historically based”
claims, which are precisely the type Beijing
periodically asserts. On September 4, 2012, China’s foreign minister, Yang
Jiechi, told US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that there is “plenty of
historical and jurisprudence evidence to show that China has sovereignty over
the islands in the South China Sea and the adjacent waters.”
As far as the “jurisprudence evidence” is concerned, the vast majority of
international legal experts have concluded that China’s
claim to historic title over the South China Sea,
implying full sovereign authority and consent for other states to transit, is
invalid. The historical evidence, if anything, is even less persuasive. There
are several contradictions in China’s use of history to justify its claims to
islands and reefs in the South China Sea, not least of which is its polemical
assertion of parallels with imperialist expansion by the United States and
European powers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Justifying China’s attempts to expand its maritime
frontiers by claiming islands and reefs far from its shores, Jia Qingguo,
professor at Beijing University’s School
of International Studies, argues
that China
is merely following the example set by the West. “The United States has Guam in Asia which is very
far away from the US
and the French have islands in the South Pacific, so it is nothing new,” Jia
told AFP recently.
China’s claim to the Spratlys on the basis of history runs
aground on the fact that the region’s past empires did not exercise
sovereignty. In pre-modern Asia, empires
were characterized by undefined, unprotected, and often changing frontiers.
The notion of suzerainty prevailed. Unlike a nation-state, the frontiers of
Chinese empires were neither carefully drawn nor policed but were more like
circles or zones, tapering off from the center of civilization to the
undefined periphery of alien barbarians. More importantly, in its territorial
disputes with neighboring India,
Burma, and Vietnam, Beijing
always took the position that its land boundaries were never defined,
demarcated, and delimited. But now, when it comes to islands, shoals, and
reefs in the South China Sea, Beijing
claims otherwise. In other words, China’s
claim that its land boundaries were historically never defined and delimited
stands in sharp contrast with the stance that China’s maritime boundaries were
always clearly defined and delimited. Herein lies a basic contradiction in
the Chinese stand on land and maritime boundaries which is untenable.
Actually, it is the mid-twentieth-century attempts to convert the undefined
frontiers of ancient civilizations and kingdoms enjoying suzerainty into
clearly defined, delimited, and demarcated boundaries of modern nation-states
exercising sovereignty that lie at the center of China’s territorial and
maritime disputes with neighboring countries. Put simply, sovereignty is a
post-imperial notion ascribed to nation-states, not ancient empires.
China’s present borders largely reflect the frontiers
established during the spectacular episode of eighteenth-century Qing
(Manchu) expansionism, which over time hardened into fixed national
boundaries following the imposition of the Westphalian nation-state system
over Asia in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Official Chinese history
today often distorts this complex history, however, claiming that Mongols,
Tibetans, Manchus, and Hans were all Chinese, when in fact the Great
Wall was built by the Chinese dynasties to keep out the northern Mongol and
Manchu tribes that repeatedly overran Han China; the wall actually
represented the Han Chinese empire’s outer security perimeter. While most
historians see the onslaught of the Mongol hordes led by Genghis Khan in the
early 1200s as an apocalyptic event that threatened the very survival of
ancient civilizations in India, Persia, and other nations (China chief among
them), the Chinese have consciously promoted the myth that he was actually
“Chinese,” and therefore all areas that the Mongols (the Yuan dynasty) had
once occupied or conquered (such as Tibet and much of Central and Inner Asia)
belong to China. China’s
claims on Taiwan and in
the South China Sea are also based on the
grounds that both were parts of the Manchu empire. (Actually, in the Manchu
or Qing dynasty maps, it is Hainan Island, not the Paracel and Spratly
Islands, that is depicted as China’s
southern-most border.) In this version of history, any territory conquered by
“Chinese” in the past remains immutably so, no matter when the conquest may
have occurred.
Such writing and
rewriting of history from a nationalistic perspective to promote national
unity and regime legitimacy has been accorded the highest priority by China’s
rulers, both Nationalists and Communists. The Chinese Communist Party
leadership consciously conducts itself as the heir to China’s
imperial legacy, often employing the symbolism and rhetoric of empire. From
primary-school textbooks to television historical dramas, the
state-controlled information system has force-fed generations of Chinese a
diet of imperial China’s
grandeur. As the Australian Sinologist Geremie Barmé points out, “For decades
Chinese education and propaganda have emphasized the role of history in the
fate of the Chinese nation-state . . . While Marxism-Leninism and Mao Thought
have been abandoned in all but name, the role of history in China’s future
remains steadfast.” So much so that history has been refined as an instrument
of statecraft (also known as “cartographic aggression”) by state-controlled
research institutions, media, and education bodies.
China uses folklore, myths, and legends, as well as history,
to bolster greater territorial and maritime claims. Chinese textbooks preach
the notion of the Middle Kingdom as being the oldest and most advanced
civilization that was at the very center of the universe, surrounded by
lesser, partially Sinicized states in East and Southeast
Asia that must constantly bow and pay their respects. China’s
version of history often deliberately blurs the distinction between what was
no more than hegemonic influence, tributary relationships, suzerainty, and
actual control. Subscribing to the notion that those who have mastered the
past control their present and chart their own futures, Beijing has always placed a very high value
on “the history card” (often a revisionist interpretation of history) in its
diplomatic efforts to achieve foreign policy objectives, especially to
extract territorial and diplomatic concessions from other countries. Almost
every contiguous state has, at one time or another, felt the force of Chinese
arms—Mongolia, Tibet, Burma, Korea, Russia, India, Vietnam, the Philippines,
and Taiwan—and been a subject of China’s revisionist history. As Martin
Jacques notes in When China Rules the World, “Imperial Sinocentrism
shapes and underpins modern Chinese nationalism.”
If the idea of national sovereignty goes back to
seventeenth-century Europe and the system that originated with the Treaty of
Westphalia, the idea of maritime sovereignty is largely a
mid-twentieth-century American concoction China has seized upon to extend
its maritime frontiers. As Jacques notes, “The idea of maritime sovereignty
is a relatively recent invention, dating from 1945 when the United States
declared that it intended to exercise sovereignty over its territorial
waters.” In fact, the UN’s Law of the Sea agreement represented the most
prominent international effort to apply the land-based notion of sovereignty
to the maritime domain worldwide—although, importantly, it rejects the idea
of justification by historical right. Thus although Beijing claims around
eighty percent of the South China Sea as its “historic waters” (and is now
seeking to elevate this claim to a “core interest” akin with its claims on
Taiwan and Tibet), China has, historically speaking, about as much right to
claim the South China Sea as Mexico has to claim the Gulf of Mexico for its
exclusive use, or Iran the Persian Gulf, or India the Indian Ocean.
Ancient empires
either won control over territories through aggression, annexation, or
assimilation or lost them to rivals who possessed superior firepower or
statecraft. Territorial expansion and contraction was the norm, determined by
the strength or weakness of a kingdom or empire. The very idea of “sacred
lands” is ahistorical because control of territory was based on who grabbed
or stole what last from whom. The frontiers of the Qin, Han, Tang, Song, and
Ming dynasties waxed and waned throughout history. A strong and powerful
imperial China, much like
czarist Russia, was
expansionist in Inner Asia and Indochina as
opportunity arose and strength allowed. The gradual expansion over the
centuries under the non-Chinese Mongol and Manchu dynasties extended imperial
China’s control over Tibet and parts of Central Asia (now
Xinjiang), Taiwan, and Southeast Asia. Modern China is, in fact, an
“empire-state” masquerading as a nation-state.
If China’s
claims are justified on the basis of history, then so are the historical
claims of Vietnamese and Filipinos based on their histories. Students of
Asian history know, for instance, that Malay peoples related to today’s
Filipinos have a better claim to Taiwan
than Beijing
does. Taiwan
was originally settled by people of Malay-Polynesian descent—ancestors of the
present-day aborigine groups—who populated the low-lying coastal plains. In
the words of noted Asia-watcher Philip Bowring, writing last year in the South
China Morning Post, “The fact that China has a long record of written
history does not invalidate other nations’ histories as illustrated by
artifacts, language, lineage and genetic affinities, the evidence of trade
and travel.” Unless one subscribes to the notion of Chinese exceptionalism,
imperial China’s
“historical claims” are as valid as those of other kingdoms and empires in
Southeast and South Asia. China laying claim
to the Mongol and Manchu empires’ colonial possessions would be equivalent to
India laying claim to Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Burma, Malaysia (Srivijaya),
Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka on the grounds that they were all parts of
either the Maurya, Chola, or the Moghul and the British Indian empires.
China’s claims in the South China Sea
are also a major shift from its longstanding geopolitical orientation to
continental power. In claiming a strong maritime tradition, China makes much of the
early-fifteenth-century expeditions of Zheng He to the Indian Ocean and Africa. But, as Bowring points out, “Chinese were
actually latecomers to navigation beyond coastal waters. For centuries, the
masters of the oceans were the Malayo-Polynesian peoples who colonized much
of the world, from Taiwan
to New Zealand and Hawaii to the south and east, and to Madagascar in
the west. Bronze vessels were being traded with Palawan, just south of Scarborough, at the time of Confucius. When Chinese
Buddhist pilgrims like Faxian went to Sri Lanka
and India
in the fifth century, they went in ships owned and operated by Malay peoples.
Ships from what is now the Philippines
traded with Funan, a state in what is now southern Vietnam, a thousand years before
the Yuan dynasty.”
And finally, China’s so-called “historic claims” to the South China Sea are actually not “centuries old.” They
only go back to 1947, when Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalist government drew the
so-called “eleven-dash line” on Chinese maps of the South China Sea,
enclosing the Spratly Islands and other chains that the ruling Kuomintang
party declared were now under Chinese sovereignty. Chiang himself, saying he
saw German fascism as a model for China, was fascinated by the Nazi concept
of an expanded Lebensraum (“living space”) for the Chinese nation.
He did not have the opportunity to be expansionist himself because the
Japanese put him on the defensive, but cartographers of the nationalist
regime drew the U-shape of eleven dashes in an attempt to enlarge China’s “living space” in the South China Sea. Following the victory of the Chinese
Communist Party in the civil war in 1949, the People’s Republic of China adopted this cartographic coup, revising
Chiang’s notion into a “nine-dash line” after erasing two dashes in the Gulf of Tonkin in 1953.
Since the end of the Second World War, China has
been redrawing its maps, redefining borders, manufacturing historical
evidence, using force to create new territorial realities, renaming islands,
and seeking to impose its version of history on the waters of the region. The
passage of domestic legislation in 1992, “Law on the Territorial Waters and
Their Contiguous Areas,” which claimed four-fifths of the South China Sea,
was followed by armed skirmishes with the Philippines and Vietnamese navies
throughout the 1990s. More recently, the dispatch of large numbers of Chinese
fishing boats and maritime surveillance vessels to the disputed waters in
what is tantamount to a “people’s war on the high seas” has further
heightened tensions. To quote commentator Sujit Dutta, “China’s
unmitigated irredentism [is] based on the . . . theory that the periphery
must be occupied in order to secure the core. [This] is an essentially
imperial notion that was internalized by the Chinese nationalists—both
Kuomintang and Communist. The [current] regime’s attempts to reach its
imagined geographical frontiers often with little historical basis have had
and continue to have highly destabilizing strategic consequences.”
One reason
Southeast Asians find it difficult to accept Chinese territorial claims is
that they carry with them an assertion of Han racial superiority over other
Asian races and empires. Says Jay Batongbacal of the University of the
Philippines law school: “Intuitively, acceptance of the nine-dash line is a
corresponding denial of the very identity and history of the ancestors of the
Vietnamese, Filipinos, and Malays; it is practically a modern revival of
China’s denigration of non-Chinese as ‘barbarians’ not entitled to equal
respect and dignity as peoples.”
Empires and
kingdoms never exercised sovereignty. If historical claims had any validity
then Mongolia could claim
all of Asia simply because it once conquered
the lands of the continent. There is absolutely no historical basis to support
either of the dash-line claims, especially considering that the territories
of Chinese empires were never as carefully delimited as nation-states, but
rather existed as zones of influence tapering away from a civilized center.
This is the position contemporary China took starting in the 1960s,
while negotiating its land boundaries with several of its neighboring
countries. But this is not the position it takes today in the cartographic,
diplomatic, and low-intensity military skirmishes to define its maritime
borders. The continued reinterpretation of history to advance contemporary
political, territorial, and maritime claims, coupled with the Communist
leadership’s ability to turn “nationalistic eruptions” on and off like a tap
during moments of tension with the United States, Japan, South Korea, India,
Vietnam, and the Philippines, makes it difficult for Beijing to reassure
neighbors that its “peaceful rise” is wholly peaceful. Since there are six
claimants to various atolls, islands, rocks, and oil deposits in the South
China Sea, the Spratly
Islands disputes are,
by definition, multilateral disputes requiring international arbitration. But
Beijing has
insisted that these disputes are bilateral in order to place its opponents
between the anvil of its revisionist history and the hammer of its growing
military power.
Mohan Malik is
a professor in Asian security at Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, in
Honolulu. The
views expressed are his own. His most recent book is China and India: Great Power Rivals. He
wishes to thank Drs. Justin Nankivell, Carlyle Thayer, Denny Roy, and David
Fouse for their comments on this article.
World Affairs
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