PETER LAYTON
Media headlines are stolen by talk of China’s island building in the South China Sea and whether Australia should join in freedom of navigation operations with the U.S. Navy. But in truth this is a sideshow to a much larger battle underway: not a clash of opposing armies but the gradual extension of China’s sphere of influence into Southeast Asia. Should Australia try to resist the Chinese thrust, take advantage of it, or seek to modify it in some manner?
In a “sphere of influence,” the dominant state can constrain and guide the foreign and domestic policy choices of other states within a particular region without using direct military coercion. For China, establishing a Southeast Asian sphere of influence would bring it several benefits. In making regional states more pliable, China could gain implicit veto power over any unfavorable actions they might take. Regional states would become less willing to provide long-term basing to American forces or short term support for transiting U.S. forces. The United States would progressively become less able to exert military pressure in the region as it became more difficult to operate there. America would be gradually pushed out of the region, and China would have excluded U.S. access without resort to armed force.
China would reap a number of domestic benefits as well. Its sphere of influence would help prevent regional countries acting as “color revolution” conduits through which counter-Chinese Communist Party activities might gain purchase. The party’s big fear is political instability, so there are advantages in ensuring adjoining states cannot export dangerous ideas into China. Moreover, the party’s standing in Chinese society would be enhanced by states in the region showing more and more deference towards Beijing. This is implicit in President Xi Jinping’s “China dream” of a restored and rejuvenated Chinese super-state.
China is steadily gaining a sphere of influence by taking a broad approach to its relations across Southeast Asia. China stresses that issues between it and other regional states should be managed bilaterally, not multilaterally. A bilateral approach allows China to make the greatest use of its power and allows the smaller state to be split off from others and isolated. This is reinforced through China’s use of strategic comprehensive partnerships that engage another state across a broad front, providing liberal support to various domestic factions that are good for China and disparaging those that are not. The flag follows trade, with the aim being to create and sustain like-minded governments.
This process can be seen across Southeast Asia. In Cambodia, China is now the largest source of foreign direct investment by far. Chinese firms run garment and food-processing factories and are heavily involved in construction, mining, infrastructure, hydropower, and agriculture. In 2016, Chinese companies provided around 80 percent of all power generated in Cambodia. China is deeply involved in building a new deep-water port. In the military domain, Cambodia has now suspended training with U.S. and Australian forces, with Cambodian Gen. Socheat noting, “I wish to state that every exercise is [now] under the sponsorship of China.” Even the small Seabees unit of some 20 U.S. Navy civil engineers that has undertaken aid projects for more than a decade has been expelled. Beyond being able to push the United States away, China also gains a proxy within ASEAN that echoes China’s position. Days before a critical ASEAN vote on the South China Sea dispute, China provided $600 million in aid to the Cambodian government.
In the Philippines, President Duterte’s shift towards China was quickly rewarded with some $24 billion in investment, loans and financing agreements. These included $5 billion for transport and infrastructure projects, $1 billion for a hydropower plant, $700 million for a steel plant, and $780 million for a port development project in Davao City, where Duterte lived for much of his life. The Chinese funding is expected to generate some 2.6 million jobs. In the military domain, China has offered the Philippines credit worth $500 million to procure Chinese-made military products. Under an initial part of the aid package, China agreed to provide the Philippines with $14.4 million to support the acquisition of “small arms, speed boats, or night-vision goggles.”
China is Malaysia’s largest trading partner and recently became its largest source of property investment. Alibaba is now setting up a major regional logistics hub in Malaysia with China deeply involved in building a large-scale transshipment deep-sea port in Melaka, seen by some as being in direct competition to Singapore, a country China seems set on punishing for taking an unhelpful stance on South China Sea matters. Malaysia is purchasing four Chinese naval vessels. Politically, Chinese support helped address the vexatious 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) matter in 2015. In late 2016, deals worth some $46.5 billion offered to Prime Minister Najib Razak during his visit to China buttressed the Malaysian government’s electoral support.
Across the region, the overall effect is to gradually change political life. Chinese financial support encourages a shift towards more authoritarian governments through providing new sources of patronage. Governments can entrench their position by rewarding supporters and binding them to the incumbent regime while making democratic processes and electoral support markedly less important. Thailand, Cambodia, and the Philippines have moved towards strongman, semi-authoritarian governments without suffering evident penalties. On the other hand, having a Western orientation seems to have bought problems for pre-Duterte Philippines and now Singapore, and increasingly being seen as perhaps not worth the trouble. Moreover, growing Chinese economic and business influence has driven regional media outlets and academia to be careful in voicing criticisms of China. Here the shift has been more towards turning a blind eye to China’s activities rather than actively supporting its positions.
The future seems obvious: Southeast Asia is steadily becoming part of China’s sphere of influence. This process may be accelerated in the Trump era, as the administration seems so far to have little interest in the region. As U.S. power recedes, China appears ready to fill the gap. For Australia, Southeast Asia falling within China’s sphere of influence would be a strategic catastrophe. Australia would be on the perimeter of Chinese power. It would be exposed, more isolated, and vulnerable to coercion and intimidation.
What should Australia do? Four options present themselves.
First, Australia could resist. It could work to enhance the resilience of ASEAN states diplomatically, economically, militarily, and politically by trying to match China’s broad-based approach. The way to achieve this would be through strengthening relationships so regional states have viable alternatives to China. Australia could encourage external powers like India, Japan, and the European Union to deepen their linkages with the region and to support the eventual implementation of the stalled Trans Pacific Partnership. Militarily, Australia already has the Five-Power Defense Arrangement to potentially act as a foundation for deeper regional defense cooperation. Politically, Foreign Minister Bishop has already staked out a useful position by stating that “an essential pillar of our preferred order is democratic community.” There needs to be greater pushback against a slow acceptance of regional authoritarianism.
The second option for Australia and the obvious alternative to resistance is acceptance. Indeed, Australia could take advantage, selling its acquiescence for a good economic deal. This may have deep long-term implications though, including to its political system.
Australia’s third option is to seek a middle ground between resistance and acceptance. It could try to modify China’s sphere of influence to be more agreeable to Canberra, though as Stephen Fitzgerald noted recently, this “can only be done if we are close enough to have voice and influence in Beijing.” Australia would need to ramp up its diplomacy significantly and may still fail. Hugh White offers a similar but subtly different perspective in arguing that Australia should make agreements with Beijing now about the limits of its regional influence. Conceding a constrained Chinese sphere of influence now would be better than a more extensive Chinese sphere of influence later.
Lastly, Australia could hide. It could ignore the matter, leave Southeast Asia to its own devices, declare neutrality, and embrace an isolationist stance. Australia would do its best to avoid regional struggles and conflicts, embracing fence-sitting if pushed, and generally adopt a low profile.
In the matter of China’s growing sphere of influence, there are no easy paths. The South China Sea dispute may be newsworthy but is only a subset of a much larger fray. It is time to focus on the real, larger battle underway.
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