Gulf security: China envisions continued US military lead
By James M.
Dorsey
Based on
remarks at The Belt and Road Initiative: China-Middle East Cooperation in an
Age of Geopolitical Turbulence workshop organized by Brookings Doha Center and
the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes,
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A first-ever joint Chinese-Russian-Iranian naval exercise signals that closer Chinese military
ties with a host of Middle Eastern nations does not translate into Chinese aspirations
for a greater role in regional security any time soon.
If anything,
the exercise, coupled with notional Chinese support for proposals for a
multilateral security approach in the Gulf, suggests that China envisions a
continued US lead in Gulf security despite mounting rivalry between the world’s
two largest economies.
That is the
message China is sending by playing down the significance of the exercise and
hinting that it would only contribute non-combat forces.
China’s
participation is expected to involve its anti-piracy fleet that is already in
Somali waters to protect commercial vessels as well as peacekeeping and
humanitarian relief personnel rather than specially dispatched units of the
People’s Liberation Army.
China’s
preference for a continued US lead in maintaining Gulf security, even if it
favours a more multilateral approach, was evident earlier this year in its
willingness to consider participating in the US-led maritime alliance that
escorts commercial vessels in the Gulf and seeks to secure shipping lanes and
was created in response to several attacks on tankers in the Gulf of Oman.
So far, the
United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Britain and Australia have joined
the alliance that started operations last month.
Despite
favouring a continued US lead, China sees a broadening of security arrangements
that would embed rather than replace the US defense umbrella in the Gulf as a
way to reduce regional tensions.
China also
believes that a multilateral arrangement would allow it to continue steering
clear of being sucked into conflicts and disputes in the Middle East, particularly
the Saudi-Iranian rivalry.
A multilateral
arrangement in which the US would remain the key military player would fit the
pattern of China’s gradual projection beyond its borders of its growing
military power.
With the
exception of a military facility in Djibouti, China’s projection becomes less
hard core the further away one gets from the People’s Republic borders.
Proposals
for a multilateral security architecture could also cater to US President
Donald J. Trump’s transactionalism as well as his insistence on burden sharing.
Getting from
A to B is however easier said than done.
If the US
security umbrella was geared towards defense again Iran, a multi-lateral
approach would have to involve Iran.
Such
involvement could be based on some kind of agreement on non-aggression, a
proposal put forward by Iran and implicit in Russia’s call for a regional
security conference along the lines of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the OSCE.
To get there
however the United States and Saudi Arabia would have to reduce tensions with
Iran, credibly signal that they have no intention of toppling or destabilizing
the Iranian regime, and resolve the crisis stemming from the US withdrawal from
the 2015 international agreement that curbed Iran’s nuclear program.
That would
seem a tall order even if Saudi Arabia and Iran have not closed the door on stalled contacts aimed at dialling down tensions.
Chinese
support has, moreover, so far lacked enthusiasm for a Russian proposal that
calls the United States, Russia, China and India to be involved in a
multilateral approach.
While
backing Russia’s proposal in general terms, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman
Geng Shuang stopped short of specifically endorsing it. Mr. Geng welcomed “all
proposals and diplomatic efforts conducive to de-escalating the situation in
the Gulf region.”
China’s
refraining to more wholeheartedly endorse the Russian proposal is rooted in
differing approaches towards multilateralism in general and alliances in
particular. China shies away from alliances emphasizing geo-economics rather
than geopolitics while Russia still operates in terms of alliances.
Looming in
the background is the fact that in the ultimate analysis China is likely to
view security in South and Central Asia as interlinked with security in the
Gulf, which in turn raises questions about the sustainability of the Chinese security
approach.
The
geographic layering of China’s approach is evident not only in China’s robust
posture in the South China Sea, but also in countries like Tajikistan and
Afghanistan.
China has
recently made progress on the construction of a road through Afghanistan’s
Wakhan Corridor. The road serves multiple geo-political goals.
It will
facilitate the movement of troops, together with a military base in Tajikistan
and Chinese cross border operations in the corridor.
The question
is whether the Chinese moves will jeopardize the presumed division of labour
between Russia and China under which Russia shoulders responsibility for
security in Central Asia while China concentrates on economic development and
if it does what impact that would have on Chinese reliance on a potential
Russian role in the Gulf.
There is little
doubt that the Gulf is gradually moving from a unilateral security arrangement
to a multilateral one driven by Gulf concerns following the September attacks
on Saudi oil facilities and a US response that has reinforced nagging doubts
about the reliability of US security guarantees.
The doubts
are further fed by the direction of US policy starting with the Obama
administration and now with the Trump administration that suggests a
re-evaluation of US national security interests in the Middle East.
China’s
belief that economics rather than geopolitics is the key to solving disputes
has so far allowed it to remain above the breach but has yet to prove its
sustainability.
China’s
approach is unlikely to shield it from the Middle East’s penchant of ensuring
that it is at the heart of concerns of major external parties.
Said Jiang
Xudong, a Middle East scholar at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences:
“Economic investment will not solve all other problems when there are religious
and ethnic conflicts.”
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior
fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, an adjunct senior research fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director of the University of
Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture
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