Researchers analyze
China’s expansion scheme
"China is actively expanding its
influence in Southeast Asia in the hope of taking this as a springboard to
reach out to the world," said Dr. Nguyen Hong Son from Hanoi National
University at a recent
seminar.
In a seminar on the new international context and the
impacts on ASEAN held at the University
of Economics and Law last week,
Vietnamese scholars and researchers said that China is emerging powerfully with
the ambition of dominating the world. China wants to turn the coastal
and maritime areas of Southeast Asian countries into its gates.
Dr. Nguyen Hong Son said that to ensure its
development, China
will have a huge demand for energy, raw materials and labor. China has
used a strategy of conservation of its national resources and increasing
exploitation of the resources of other countries, particularly its neighbors.
The strong emergence and growing influence in the
region of China
will put ASEAN in a more vulnerable position in its relationship with this
country in all fields. “This imbalance, and China's intentions, may hamper
the process of economic integration of ASEAN nations, especially for those
nations most under Chinese influence. We may find that ASEAN serves the
development of this 'big brother' more than meets the development
requirements of the region," Son said.
Directing his attention to China’s
aggression in the East Sea, Dr. Son said that this is one step in China's
"expansion" in the region and the world. To implement this
strategy, China will find
ways to avoid the internationalization of the East Sea
disputes. At the same time it will divide ASEAN solidarity to prevent the
interference of this block. To achieve the goal, China
will maintain the conflict at only a moderate level so that other countries,
especially the United
States, will be dissuaded from taking
direct military intervention, but it will also be enough to put pressure on
countries in the region.
According to Son,
China on one
side conducts disputes to extend its interest and on the other side uses
economic leverage through preferential investment policies to influence less
developed countries. "And China has been successful in dividing
Southeast Asian countries, as it did at the ASEAN Summit in July 2012 when
this organization failed to reach agreement on the East Sea issue," he
said.
Sharing the same view of the rise of China, Dr. Pham Sy Thanh, Director of the
Chinese Economic Research Program of the Hanoi University of Economics, said
that "China
is emerging as a world factory" and they require large amounts of raw
materials and raw energy to meet development needs.
Southeast Asian countries have invested in the mining
industry and the production of primary products for export to China to earn
foreign currency. China,
after refining and manufacturing these raw materials, sell these products
back to Southeast Asian countries and easily acquires these markets. "It
stunts the process of industrialization of these countries and many countries
suffer from a trade deficit with China. Vietnam is one of the countries
with the largest deficit," he said.
For the East Sea issues, this researcher also said that this is
just one of the strategies of China
in its global reach by means of a marine economy, once called the
"Chinese dream". And China is doing everything to
accomplish that dream.
Talking about the impact of the conflicts between China and Southeast Asian countries related to
the East Sea,
Ms. Nguyen Thi Thu Trang from the University
of Economics and Law said that it
affects the interests of all countries in the region and the world because
the East Sea is considered the gateway to
international maritime transport.
According to Trang, realizing the importance of the
East Sea, China is expanding into it, through its so-called “U-shaped line”.
"China
wants to turn the waters inside the U-shaped line into its own waters and at
that time the rights of other countries, especially the Southeast Asian
countries, must depend on China.
This will have an impact on both economic and political issues," Trang
said.
"The ASEAN countries should struggle with China for
their rights as a group," she advised.
Compiled by Tran Cham, VietNamNet Bridge
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