China’s mix of historical and legal claims in the South China Sea are inconsistent, says Frank Ching. Beijing can’t have its cake and eat it.
By Frank Ching
US scholar Lucian Pye once famously said
that China was not a country but ‘a civilization pretending to be a state.’
That may have been apt at one time, but today’s China has been transformed into
a modern state that plays an active role in international forums.
However,
China also tries to capitalize on its long history when pressing its case in
international disputes. Nowhere is this more clear than in the current South China Sea territorial dispute, which pits China against several of its
neighbours. Also embroiled in the various rows are the United States, India
and, increasingly, Japan. It’s a potent mix.
In 1996,
Beijing ratified the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea(UNCLOS) and publicly embraced the
treaty’s provision that ‘China shall enjoy sovereign rights and jurisdiction
over an exclusive economic zone of 200 nautical miles and the continental
shelf’ – a hitherto unknown concept.
At the
same time, however, it reaffirmed its claim over the islets, rocks and reefs in
the South China Sea on historical grounds—grounds that aren’t recognized by the
convention. That is to say, China claims all the rights granted under
international law today and, in addition, claims rights that aren’t generally
recognized because its civilization can be traced back several thousand years.
Historically,
China was the dominant power in East Asia and considered lesser powers as its
tributaries. By insisting now on territorial claims that reflect a historical
relationship that vanished hundreds of years ago with the rise of the West,
Beijing is, in a sense, attempting to revive and legitimize a situation where
it was the unchallenged hegemon.
The
ambiguity about what parts of international law China recognizes and which bits
it doesn’t gives rise to the current dispute, which directly involves Vietnam,
the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei, and indirectly involves the interests of
many other nations.
The
claims made by Southeast Asian countries rest primarily on the provisions of
the Law of the Sea. China, however, is taking the position that its sovereignty
over the territories concerned precedes the enactment of the Law of the Sea,
and so the law doesn’t apply. History trumps law.
In 2009,
China submitted a map to the UN Commission on the Law of the Sea in support of
its claims to ‘indisputable sovereignty over the islands of the South China Sea
and the adjacent waters’ as well as ‘the seabed and subsoil thereof.’
The map
featured a U-shaped dotted line that encompassed virtually the entire South
China Sea and hugged the coasts of neighbouring countries including Vietnam,
Malaysia and the Philippines. This was the first time China had submitted a map
to the United Nations in support of its territorial claims, but there was no
explanation given as to whether it claimed all the waters as well as the
islands enclosed by the dotted line.
This was
a radical departure from the position China took when it ratified the treaty.
Back then, China said that it would hold consultations ‘with the states with
coasts opposite or adjacent to China respectively on the basis of international
law and in accordance with the principle of equitability.’
Significantly,
especially for the United States, China’s position on UNCLOS has also shifted
in another respect. In 1996, it took the position that foreign warships
required its approval in order to pass through China’s territorial waters. Now,
China says that foreign warships must obtain its approval before they can pass
through its exclusive economic zone – a much wider area that isn’t part of its
sovereign waters.
The
United States disputes that position, maintaining that waters in a country’s
EEZ are part of the high seas and that naval vessels are free to enter them and
even conduct operations without any need for approval.
This
difference in opinion between China and the United States (as well as most
developed countries) has led to confrontations between the two countries, with
US naval surveillance vessels carrying out information-gathering missions in
China’s EEZ and being challenged by the Chinese.
China’s
resort to history is a relatively new development in international law,
although it isn’t completely unprecedented. For example, coastal states have
been allowed to claim extended jurisdiction over waters, especially bays or
islands, when those claims have been open and long-standing, exclusive, and widely
accepted by other states.
In
China’s case, however, its claims are evidently neither exclusive nor widely
accepted by other states since they are being openly contested. Still, Chinese
officials and scholars have attempted to buttress their arguments by appealing
to historical records.
For
example, Li Guoqiang, a research scholar with the Research Center for Chinese
Borderland History and Geography of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences wrote
in July in the China Daily: ‘Historical evidence shows that Chinese
people discovered the islands in the South China Sea during the Qin (221-206
BC) and Han (206 BC-AD 220) dynasties.’ China’s maritime boundary, he asserts,
was established by the Qing dynasty (1644-1911).
‘In contrast,’
he wrote, ‘Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines hardly knew anything about the
islands in the South China Sea before China’s Qing Dynasty.’
Vietnam,
in pressing its case, has cited maps and geography attesting to its ‘historical
sovereignty’ over the Paracel and Spratly islands going back to the 17th century. This
doesn’t match the antiquity of China’s claims, but, at the very least, it shows
that Chinese claims have been contested for centuries, and that China didn’t
enjoy exclusive and continuous jurisdiction over these islands.
And, if
history is to be the criterion, which period of history should be decisive?
After all, if the Qin or Han dynasty is to be taken as the benchmark, then
China’s territory today would be much smaller, since at the time it had not yet
acquired Tibet, Xinjiang or Manchuria, now known as the northeast.
One
compromise that China has offered to its neighbours is to shelve the
territorial disputes and engage in joint development of natural resources. This
was proposed by President Hu Jintao as recently as August 31, when he met the
Philippine President Benigno Aquino.
However,
there are serious problems. Just what does China mean by this policy?
The
Chinese Foreign Ministry website explains: ‘The concept of “setting aside dispute
and pursuing joint development” has the following four elements:
‘1. The
sovereignty of the territories concerned belongs to China.
‘2. When
conditions are not ripe to bring about a thorough solution to territorial
dispute, discussion on the issue of sovereignty may be postponed so that the
dispute is set aside. To set aside dispute does not mean giving up sovereignty.
It is just to leave the dispute aside for the time being.
‘3. The
territories under dispute may be developed in a joint way.
‘4. The
purpose of joint development is to enhance mutual understanding through
cooperation and create conditions for the eventual resolution of territorial
ownership.’
These
four points make it clear that instead of shelving the territorial disputes,
the idea of joint development is China’s way of imposing its claims of
sovereignty over the other party. Chinese sovereignty is the stated desired
outcome of any joint development. No wonder that no country has taken China up
on its proposal.
Perhaps
because of the conflict between historical claims and the UNCLOS, other Chinese
scholars are now calling for a review of the Law of the Sea.
Li
Jinming, a professor at the Center for Southeast Asia Studies at Xiamen
University, says that there are ‘shortcomings’ in UNCLOS and, as a result,
‘China should consider its own situation before enforcing UNCLOS.’ That is
to say, even though China has ratified the treaty, which has been in effect for
17 years, Beijing shouldn’t abide by its provisions unless the convention is
somehow revised to support China’s territorial claims.
Beijing,
it appears, wants to be made an exception in international law. It wants to
have its cake and eat it. But law is law. What is the point of having
international law when it is no longer international, and when it is no longer
law?
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