Comment & Analysis - July 06, 2011
Risk of Accidental Escalation in the South China Sea
Till Papenfuss l Policy Analyst
papenfuss@ipinst.org
The risk of confrontation in the South China Sea (SCS) is increasing as a result of recent maritime encounters between China and Vietnam. During two incidents on May 26th and June 9th, Vietnamese oil exploration vessels conducting seismic surveys were harassed by Chinese ships. This has brought to a head the long-standing territorial dispute over the areas around the Paracel and Spratly Islands in the SCS.
Stephanie T. Kleine-Ahlbrandt, the China and North East Asia project director of the International Crisis Group (ICG) in Beijing, believes conflict in the SCS is a distinct possibility. “Given the current highly charged situation and proliferation of maritime patrol boats in the region, a clash between claimant country vessels has potential to devolve into a shooting incident – for example, between Vietnam and China,” Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt told the International Peace Institute during a June 21st interview.
There are three main reasons why the areas around the Paracel and Spratly archipelagos are so heavily contested:
-- Natural resources: Vast oil and gas reserves are suspected in the areas surrounding the two archipelagos.
-- Geopolitical competition: With China rising as a naval power, the current dominant power in the Pacific Ocean, the United States, is looking for ways to maintain its influence. China is looking to push back and prevent containment of its naval expansion.
-- Access to fish stocks: The area is home to significant fish stocks providing livelihoods for large communities in the region’s states.
Brunei, China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam are claiming all or parts of the contested territory, though China’s claims are the most extensive and cover almost the entire SCS. China argues that the island groups have been part of Chinese territory for over 2,000 years. And although China is a signatory to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea [UNCLOS], Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt noted that "its still ambiguous claim is not grounded in the international law of the convention.”
Vietnam contests China’s position, claiming to have ruled over the islands since the seventeenth century and stating that the islands fall entirely within its territory. Brunei, Malaysia, and the Philippines invoke geographical proximity and say that parts of the islands fall within their Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ), in accordance with the UNCLOS.
The risks for conflict have been exposed on multiple occasions in the past. In 1974 and 1988, the dispute turned bloody when the Chinese and Vietnamese navies clashed in the SCS. During these confrontations, China gained full control over the Paracel Islands as well as over parts of the Spratly Islands, and more than 70 Vietnamese sailors were killed.
According to Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt, “These competing claims, along with a history of confrontations, make the SCS one of the world’s most sensitive regions.”
The path out of the current crisis is fraught with difficulties. Geopolitical competition, overlapping claims, and disunity among ASEAN states combine to create a complex overall state of affairs.
At the geopolitical level, competition between China and the United States for naval supremacy in the Pacific Ocean and the SCS looms large. “China is deeply concerned about tightening security ties between the US and countries in the region,” Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt said. “China’s recent provocative actions in the SCS and increasing naval capabilities make other claimant countries doubt Beijing’s proclaimed commitment to the peaceful solution of maritime disputes.” Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt said that "all of this strengthens U.S. determination to multilateralize the issue of the South China Sea as much as possible."
China is bent on resolving the issue bilaterally in order to maximize its leverage over the smaller countries involved, while other countries, including Vietnam and the United States, are supporting a multilateral approach. A multilateral solution would pit China against a group of nations bargaining collectively and considerably weaken China’s position. Given the underlying geopolitical factors, China is particularly reluctant to accept outside intervention.
However, a multilateral approach is unlikely to gain any traction from the outset, despite US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's offer in August 2010 of US mediation and Vietnam’s subsequent advocacy for a multilateral approach. The United States is likely, however, to continue to try and play a central role. David Bosco in his Foreign Policy blog The Multilateralist cited the US chief of naval operations, Admiral Gary Roughead, who emphasized the importance of a continued U.S. presence for stability in the region and even raised the issue of US accession to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea in order to lend its efforts greater credibility. Disagreement within the region remains a key obstacle to progress.
“ASEAN members remain divided over the SCS,” said Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt, noting that these countries “have divergent economic and security interests, from Vietnam’s hard line claims to Malaysia’s economically driven pragmatism and Myanmar’s rubber stamp for China’s position."
"This makes a collective ASEAN position highly unlikely,” she said.
The stakes are high in the SCS. The murky legal environment, vital economic interests, and power politics produce serious volatility and the risk of conflict. Ms. Kleine-Ahlbrandt warns with urgency that it is incumbent upon the countries involved, particularly China and Vietnam, to defuse the tensions, given that “the most critical risk factor for conflict in the region is accidental escalation.”
The Global Observatory
A Gulf Union? Not Yet
A union between Persian Gulf countries the along the lines of the European Union may be a long way from being achieved.
Key Global Events to Watch in May
A list of key upcoming meetings and events with implications for global affairs.
The Global Observatory is a new website by IPI, providing timely analysis on peace and security issues, interviews with leading policymakers, interactive maps, and more.
Recent Events
May 10, 2012
Arbour: What the Rule of Law Means
“In my understanding of the rule of law, fundamentally, what the rule of law means is that it embraces the principle of equality before the law,” Louise Arbour, president of the International Crisis Group (ICG), told an IPI audience on May 10, 2012. Ms. Arbour outlined that this means that no one is above the law and everyone has both equal protection and equal benefit of the law. ![]()
May 03, 2012
Shachtman: Cyber Threats Akin to South Bronx, Not Pearl Harbor
“There’s not a danger of a cyber Pearl Harbor… it’s more like the South Bronx circa 1999, where there’s a danger that it becomes such a tough neighborhood that no one wants to set up shop there and people move out,” Noah Shachtman, editor of the Danger Room blog at Wired magazine and non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution, told an IPI audience at a panel on cyber security on May 3, 2011.![]()
April 27, 2012
Preventing Conflicts in Africa: The Role of Early Warning and Response Systems
An April 27th roundtable discussion at IPI titled “Preventing Conflicts in Africa: The Role of Early Warning and Response Systems” examined the progress, prospects and challenges of regional and international early warning and response mechanisms to monitor, anticipate, and mitigate potential conflict situations in Africa.![]()










