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You are here: Home / Archives for China Maritime Strategy

China Maritime Strategy

Tactical Instability on the South China Sea and Sino-American Decoupling

October 30, 2018 by Axel Dessein

By Axel Dessein
30 October 2018

The USS Decatur finds itself seconds from disaster during an unsafe encounter with a Chinese destroyer in September 2018. (Image Credit: US Navy)

In late September 2018, a Chinese Luyang-class destroyer nearly collided with the American destroyer U.S.S. Decatur during a Freedom of Navigation Operation (FONOP) in the South China Sea. These operations are essentially aimed at signalling a commitment to keeping the sea lanes open, the near-collision demonstrates that such commitments are to be upheld. Following the unsafe encounter at sea, several commentators pointed out that this atypical event may be a reflection of the broader deterioration in relations between the two countries. Indeed, we may now be witnessing the effects of the trade war spilling over into the military and security domain. This shift in behaviour is a crucial development, as the Trump Administration seems to have declared a new Cold War on China.

Winning Control

At the strategic level, China’s acquisitions in the South China Sea are its answer to the First and Second Island Chains, which caused the country’s claustrophobic vision of its surrounding seascape. Indeed, while the American interpretation of these island chains was aimed at keeping the country in, China itself views this enduring element of the region’s geostrategic outlook as benchmarks for its naval ambitions, as Andrew S. Erickson and Joel Wuthnow demonstrate.

In the 1970s, China took control of the Paracel Islands and their surrounding waters after a military standoff with the Vietnamese Navy. It is on those islands that China eventually established Sansha City, the administrative basis for control over the “Three Sands:” the Paracels (or Xisha, West Sand), the Spratlys (or Nansha, South Sand), and the Macclesfield Bank and Scarborough Shoal (commonly grouped under the name Zhongsha, Central Sand).

Undoubtedly, heaps of sand abound. Satellite imagery reveals that since 2014, China has engaged in massive land reclamation and construction activities on many of the islands and submerged features. This island-building enterprise is a clear expression of the intent to establish a military foothold in the region, thereby securing relative control of the sea. If for instance, one draws a line between the different island groups, a triangle becomes visible within the Nine-Dash Line, a series of dashes that trace China’s maritime demarcation line.

The Science of Military Strategy (Zhanlüe xue), an informative study released by the Chinese Academy of Military Science is especially enlightening as to what these advancements mean for China. According to the study, China’s strategic thinking is increasingly looking towards the South China Sea to attain a form of effective control (youxiao kongzhi) over the area to establish a forward-deployed position (qianyan fangwei) away from the mainland. However, it remains unclear what exactly China is claiming: the sea itself or the many features within the Nine-Dash Line.

This ambiguity fits perfectly within the nature of the country’s approach towards asserting its claims. In fact, China seems to be moving within the so-called grey zone, a form of strategy “at the low end of the conflict spectrum in which […] military coercion is occurring to alter the status quo,” according to James J. Wirtz. Whether conflict in the grey zone is an entirely new domain is of course an interesting debate, as Toshi Yoshihara demonstrated an earlier variation of such behaviour in his appraisal of the Paracel Sea Battle between China and Vietnam. Whatever the answer may be, such short-of-war behaviour has clearly demonstrated its effectiveness time and again.

Manning the Great Wall at Sea

Ambiguity and non-military coercion appear to be essential elements in China’s toolbox for the South China Sea. Conor M. Kennedy and Andrew S. Erickson have written extensively on this topic. Most importantly, one has to recognise that there are essentially three Chinese sea forces: the grey-hulled navy, the white-hulled coast guard and its fishermen. Aptly called a maritime militia, these fishing boats are the vanguard involved in promoting and defending China’s sovereignty at sea. That is not to say, however, that China has come up with a recipe for success.

The 2012 Scarborough Shoal standoff demonstrates the fallibility of Chinese strategy. Special attention can be drawn to the Philippines which in 2013 filed a case against China’s territorial claims at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. After a ruling in favour of the Philippines that thereby denied the Chinese claims, China rejected the validity of the PCA and insisted on resolving the disputes bilaterally. In this instance, China failed to win control, and the shoal remains a major source of tension between the two countries.

The South China Sea is sometimes referred to as “Asia’s powder keg” because of its precarious position between China and several ASEAN states. (Image Credit: Global Security, CSIS, DW)

Other attempts have been made to quell China’s expansionist activities in the South China Sea. After sixteen years of negotiations China and the Association of the Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) recently made some progress on drafting the framework of a proposed Code of Conduct in the South China Sea, which is a slow albeit necessary process. However, the conflict is not limited to Asia. Because of the growing economic and political relationship between China and countries like Greece, the European Union has come short of wording a clear statement on the issue. Here, we see attempts at preserving international law in a key trading region like the South China Sea increasingly being trumped by other economic interests.

One commentator suggests that the Scarborough Shoal standoff reveals much about China’s intent. The country demonstrated non-military assertiveness with the aim of becoming a great power at sea (haiyang qiangguo). Another commentator sees an analogy between China’s sea power endeavours and those of the German navy under Admiral Tirpitz. Broader historical parallels are also drawn with the Anglo-German conflict of the nineteenth century. However, while the clash between the world’s most powerful states is primarily about their desire for great-power status, diverging ideologies are shaping how this conflict plays out. Here, Alfred W. McCoy writes: “Treat the South China Sea as central, not peripheral, and the Cold War not as bounded by a specific ideological conflict but as the midpoint in a century-long clash of empires.” Today, the empires in question are of course, China and the U.S.

A Relationship Adrift

Amid growing trade tensions, the countries put a halt to their Diplomatic and Security Dialogue (D&SD). The U.S. Secretary of Defence James Mattis also skipped China during his October 2018 trip to Asia, but did meet with his Chinese counterpart in Singapore. In light of such events, it is but a small surprise that Chinese academics and political groups are discussing a “decoupling” (tuogou), a process which describes a potential rupture in the economic and security relationships between China and the U.S. The risks associated with such an unravelling of the ties between China and the U.S. are manifold, with increased tactical instability demonstrated by the recent near-collision as an example.

Strategic competition with China is back on the American agenda. As a result, the two giants are increasingly stepping on each other’s toes. In this scenario, the destroyer’s sortie could indeed be a display of greater confidence and boldness on the Chinese part, showcasing a broader shift in the relationship. Nevertheless, it is interesting to note that an article by a think tank affiliated with China’s State Council still urges restraint in face of “long-term strategic competition” with the United States. While it is unclear how long such moderation will last, our understanding of the Chinese decision-making process clearly suffers from large information gaps. Simply talking about a new Cold War will not be the answer, learning from Chinese words and actions will be.


Axel Dessein is a doctoral candidate at King’s College London and a Senior Editor at Strife. His research focuses on the implications of China’s rise on the current world order. Axel completed his BA and MA in Oriental Languages and Cultures at Ghent University. You can follow him on Twitter @AxelDessein.


Banner image source: https://www.stripes.com/news/photos-show-how-close-chinese-warship-came-to-colliding-with-us-navy-destroyer-1.550153

Filed Under: Blog Article Tagged With: America, Axel Dessein, China, China Maritime Strategy, feature, New Cold War, South China sea, strategy, Tactics

The Little Blue Men: China’s Maritime Proxy-Warfare Strategy

September 9, 2016 by Cheng Lai Ki

By: Cheng Lai Ki

28-3351721-2101-2

Maritime tensions in the East Asia region are undoubtedly a hallmark event of the early twenty-first century, as well as of the emergence of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as a regional superpower in the East. Concurrent to existing tensions between Japan, Korea and the PRC over islands in the East China Sea (i.e. Senkaku), the emerging Eastern power has also begun to expand into the South China Sea – claiming its historical sovereignty. Coined as the ‘Little Blue Men’, China has increased the deployment of its Maritime Militia into the disputed waters within South-East Asia (SEAsia) over the past six months. This proxy-warfare strategy is similar to President Valdimir Putin’s ‘Little-Green-Men’ strategy of deploying civilian militia forces to support Russian operations during the Ukrainian Crisis.[1] China’s military and naval expansion in the region has not slowed, especially with the integration of the Type 053 Frigate into its Coast Guard Force in around June 2016.[2] While it remains relatively easy to track the progression of the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) and its new assets/platforms, tracking its Maritime Militia has proven somewhat more elusive.

The ‘Little Blue Men’ are China’s Maritime Militia formed of civilian fishermen and seafaring merchants. According to an article from Defense One, the PRC’s ‘Little Blue Men’ were ‘Chinese merchant and fishing vessels [behaving] in sharp contrast to China’s navy ships, “crossing the [USS Lassen’s] bow and manoeuvring around the [navy] destroyer even as they kept their distance”’.[3] Articles 27 and 28 in Section 3 of the United Nations Conventions on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS) have established the immunity and relevant protective laws of civilian/commercial vessels conducting passage through ‘sovereign waters’. This issue has been under consistent debate after China’s disregard  for the Court of Arbitration’s ruling on 12 July 2016 about China’s sovereignty of the South China Sea. The ruling effectively denounced most of China’s maritime activity in the region as non-innocent passage in an Economic Free Zone belonging to the surrounding SEAsian countries. The PRC has since vowed to disregard the ruling and continued to conduct operations and increased presence within the contested waters.

China’s use of the Maritime Militia is not a new strategy. It existed after the emergence of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in the 1920s and its solidification as China’s main political power in the 1960s. According to Erikson and Kennedy, the first recorded implementation of maritime militia can be linked to its island seizure campaigns during the 1950s – namely, the First Taiwan Strait Crisis (1955-96).[4] That PLAN has continued with this proxy-warfare strategy is evident from the 2012 seizure of the Scarborough Shoals from the Philippines and the 2014 repelling of Vietnamese vessels from a Chinese oil-platform located near the contested Paracel Islands.[5] The PLAN Maritime Militia has been defined by the commanders from the Zhongshan garrison as ‘an irreplaceable mass armed organization not released from production and a component of China’s ocean defence armed forces [that enjoys] low sensitivity and great leeway in maritime rights protection actions.’[6] In a 2014 Official PLA Publication, it described its Maritime Militia as ‘穿上迷彩是合格战士,脱下迷彩是守法渔民’; which can be translated into ‘a soldier when wearing camouflage, complying fishermen when not’. Such hybrid strategies can also be identified in Western civilizations, as with the historical use of privateers by the East India Trading Company to protect merchant vessels traveling the high-seas.[7] Despite this maritime proxy-warfare being a historically entrenched strategy, it has to be modernized to adapt to contemporary laws and operational platforms. What are the modern military strategic roots of China’s ‘Little Blue Men’? Outside of regional presence, what other objectives can an efficient militia support?

 

2013 Science of Military Strategy & Thousand Grains of Sand

The roots of China’s modern Maritime Militia strategy can be most recently traced back to the 2013 Science and Military Strategy publication and the concept of Forward Defence of its strategic space.[8] The concept essentially emphasises the need to shift possible contention locations away from China’s geographical (inclusive of coastal) territory and into its peripheral regions. By expanding its defendable dominion, China effectively increases the distances between itself and potential adversaries. This enforcement of forward defence can be further confirmed through the fortifications (i.e. runways and radar towers) made on the artificial islands in the disputed maritime regions in SEAsia. Yet, how does this apply to their Little Blue Men?

To realize their Forward Defence strategy within its maritime domain, China utilises its largest asset: its people. Chairman Mao once characterised the contentions China faces (and will face) as a ‘People’s War’; where everyone is equally confronted by the same threat, and hence arises the need for collective resistance.[9] As such, the notion of unity is an essential concept identifiable in leadership discussion across multiple topics as argued by Martin Jacques in a 2010 TEDTalk. This unity is essentially the concept of nationalism (or national pride), as stated in the 2014 official publication of China’s Maritime Militia, mentioned above. Adapting this to the PLAN’s Maritime Militia strategy, the 2013 Science of Military Strategy publication essentially suggests utilizing China’s grandiose civilian population to its advantage. This reflects another strategy known as Thousand Grains of Sand, where power can be obtained through exploiting the volume of the citizen population for intelligence and warfare purposes.[10] To skeptical security scholars, this deployment of civilians onto the frontline and exploitation of their attack immunity resembles a ‘human shield’. Evidence of this strategy is evident from incidents where detained fishing vessels were ‘rammed’ clear (and allowed to escape) by the larger Type-053 Frigates of the Chinese Coast Guard (essentially warships) escorts. This allows the PRC to project military presence in the maritime domain under the guise of protective escorts.

china-map
Fig 1. China’s Maritime Forward Defence Area The red line on the map indicates the general area of China’s maritime forward defence activities. It can be argued that this line essentially forms another ‘Great-Wall’ to defend its empire. Hence, the notion of forward defence but through regulated naval patrols, Maritime Militias (basically a human-shield) and artificial outposts.

Outside of Power & Control

Outside of establishing presence and control in the contested maritime region, an efficient militia can also provide significant human intelligence (HUMINT) support – as defined by Michael Herman’s HUMINT Pyramid.[11] The PLAN’s Little Blue Men are civilians nonetheless and are able to travel inconspicuously throughout several maritime regions. Although illegal, the identity of seafaring vessels is dependent on what flag they fly during their passage. In addition, when coupled with China’s extensive HUMINT infrastructure of embedded civilian spies, the Little Blue Men can easily become a means of payload delivery and asset deployment for the PLAN and other Chinese agencies. Of course, while these concepts remain , we should not deny the possibilities of such strategies – especially with China’s increasing recognition of Cross-Domain Warfare.[12] China recognises the need to defend its maritime peripherals to ensure a more inclusive security environment, especially after its geographical command reform in 2015 (See Fig 1).

In summary, China’s Little Blue Men strategy supports a greater concept of strategic space expansion through forward defence. Guided by Mao’s concept of all Chinese conflicts requiring national resistance, it is of no surprise that the CCP would be expanding its militia programs – something reflected in its HUMINT programs and even cyberspace according to Sheldon and MacReynolds.[13] Understanding that militaristic behaviour would significantly undermine the image projected by Xi Jinping’s administration, the party has turned to its massive civilian population. It is without a doubt that the objective of China’s ‘Little Blue Men’ is to support its strategic space expansion without projecting a direct military presence in the region. The employment of militia forces is a revitalization of its older strategies of creating a sort of maritime wall capable of intelligence gathering, early-warning and forward defense.

 

 

 

Cheng served as an Amour Officer and Training Instructor at the Armour Training Institute (ATI) in the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) and now possesses reservist status. Currently undertaking his MA in International Intelligence and Security at King’s College London, his research revolves around security considerations within the Asia-Pacific Region and more specifically around areas of Cybersecurity, Maritime Security and Intelligence Studies. His Graduate thesis explores the characteristics and trends defining China’s emerging Cybersecurity and Cyberwarfare capabilities. He participated in the April 2016 9/12 Cyber Student Challenge in Geneva and has been published in IHS Janes’s Intelligence Review in May 2016. You can follow him on Twitter @LK_Cheng

 

 

 

 

Notes:

[1] Herman, M. Intelligence and Power, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 1996.

[2] Qiu, M. ‘Chinese Military Strategy: Cross-Domain Concepts in the 2013 Edition’, Cross-Domain Deterrence Working Paper, (La Jolla, CA), September 2015.

[3] See Sheldon, R. & McReynolds, J. ‘Civil-Military Integration and Cybersecurity’, in Lindsay, J.R., Cheung T.M. & Reveron, (eds.) D.S. China and Cybersecurity: Espionage, Strategy and Politics in the Digital Domain, (New York: Oxford University Press), Apr 2015; for more information about China’s Cyber-Militias.

[4] “Little Green Men” a primer on Modern Unconventional Russian Warfare, Ukraine 2013 – 2014, (Fort Bragg, NC: US Army Special Operations Command), 2015.

[5] Lin, J. & Singer, P.W. ‘China arms up with a new warship’, PopularScience, (Jun 01 2016); [Online].

[6] Watson, B. ‘The D Brief: U.S. to China: No harm, no foul in the South China Sea’, DefenceOne, (Nov 3 2015); [Online], Available from: http://www.defenseone.com/news/2015/11/the-d-brief-november-03-2015/123349/?oref=search_Little%20Blue%20Men, (Accessed Sept 1 2016).

[7] Erickson, A.S. ‘Revelations on China’s Maritime Modernization’, TheDiplomat, (Apr 16, 2016); [Online], Available from: http://thediplomat.com/2015/04/revelations-on-chinas-maritime-modernization/ (Accessed Sept 1 2016).

[8]Erickson, A.S. & Kennedy, C.M. ‘China’s Maritime Militia: What is it and how to deal with it’, Foreign Affairs, (Jun 23 2016), [Online]

[9]曾鹏翔, 傳志刚, 连荣华 [Zeng Pengxiang, Chuan Zhigang, Lian Ronghua], “科学构建海上民兵管控体系” [Scientifically Build a Maritime Militia Management System], National Defense, No. 12 (2014), pp. 68-70; as cited in Erikson A.S. & Kennedy C.M. China’s Maritime Militia, (Arlingotn, VA: Centre for Naval Analysis), 2016, pp. 1

[10] Cheng, LK. ‘Private Contractors, Governments and Security by Proxy: An analysis of contemporary challenges, governmental developments and international impacts of private military and security companies’, Dissertation: University of Leicester, (2015).

[11] Xiaosong, S. (eds), The Science of Military Strategy [战略学], (Beijing, CN: Academy of Military Sciences Press, 2013), 104.

[12] Cho, T.K. ‘Mao’s War of Resistance: Framework for China’s Grand Strategy’, Parameters, (2011); 6 – 18.

[13] Dunnigan, J. ‘China’s Thousand Grains of Sand’, Strategy Page: Dirty Little Secrets, (Jul 21 2005),

Image Source: http://files.balancer.ru/forums/attaches/2014/01/28-3351721-2101-2.jpg

Filed Under: Blog Article Tagged With: Active Defense, China, China Maritime Strategy, feature, intelligence, Little Blue Men, proxy, South China sea, UNCLOS

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