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The
Pentagon's Surprisingly Sober Look at China
Ted Galen Carpenter
and Justin Logan
After numerous delays reflecting disagreements within
the Bush administration, the Pentagon has finally
released its Annual Report to Congress on the Military
Power of the People's Republic of China. Previous
reports conveyed a very hawkish, worst-case portrait of
the PRC's capabilities and intent. The 2005 version,
however, presents a reasonably even-handed assessment of
the PRC military, and of China-U.S. relations generally.
Perhaps the most striking aspect of the latest report is
its tone. It lauds a "cooperative and constructive"
relationship that has emerged between the United States
and China since the 2001 EP-3 spy plane incident. At the
same time, it seems to acknowledge the seriousness of
China's warnings about Taiwan. It recognizes China's
recent anti-secession law as "a rhetorical counter to
the U.S. Taiwan Relations Act," and cites a Chinese
general who worries about Taiwan for strategic reasons.
In the general's view, reunifying with Taiwan is of "far
reaching significance to breaking international forces'
blockade against China's maritime security"
America's
interest is in managing China's inevitable rise to great
power status without needlessly embroiling Americans in
a war. Doing so requires a dispassionate assessment of
China's
views on
Taiwan. The DOD report is a good step in that direction.
The report acknowledges that controlling Taiwan is a
"core interest" for China, and for good reason: aside
from the motive of national pride regarding
reunification, roughly 80 percent of China's energy
imports pass through the waters adjacent to Taiwan.
Securing those sea lanes by way of naval access to
Taiwan is a high priority for Beijing. (For a look at
how seriously great powers take the issue of securing
access to energy supplies, one could examine U.S. policy
in the Middle East since the 1940s.) China's economic
growth is precariously perched on its ability to meet
its growing energy needs, and the PRC leadership feels
its energy lifeline is in jeopardy if it does not
control vital sea lanes.
While DOD recognizes that "China's ability to project
conventional military power beyond its periphery remains
limited," it also acknowledges China's growing
capabilities regarding Taiwan. China has focused its
defense spending on acquiring increasing numbers of
fourth-generation fighter aircraft from Russia,
bolstering its submarine forces, and other measures
designed to make its claims over Taiwan more credible.
As China's military power increases, the risks to the
United States of shielding Taiwan from China will
continue to grow higher, raising serious questions
regarding the prudence of Washington's commitment.
From a strategic standpoint, the most significant new
component of the report is an effort to put the problems
China's
military modernization poses in a regional context.
Previously, the report has been framed in the context of
a United
States struggle with China over Taiwan; by contrast, the
2005 report notes that the decisions China makes "will
have significant implications -- not just for the
United States,
but for China, the Asia-Pacific region, and the world."
In particular, China's military modernization could
"accelerate a shift in the regional balance of power,
affecting the security of many countries."
This reframing is long overdue, and could be useful in
shaking other countries in East Asia from their security
slumber. Until now, such regional powers as Japan, South
Korea, and Indonesia have been able to shrug off China's
growing power because of the assumption that the United
States would do whatever it took to balance against
China. With a costly and distracting war continuing in
Iraq, the Defense Department may have come to the
recognition that its resources are not infinite, and
that China's neighbors must share the concern over its
growing power and prepare their own responses. The new
DOD report, coupled with the recent joint U.S.-Japan
security declaration adopted in February, may signal a
growing recognition that regional powers must step up to
help shape China's rise.
On the issue of regional military capabilities, Taiwan
gets a well deserved drubbing for its complacent
approach to its own security. "Taiwan defense spending
has steadily declined in real terms over the past
decade, even as Chinese air, naval, and missile force
modernization has increased the need for countermeasures
that would enable Taiwan to avoid being quickly
overwhelmed." DOD officials have been increasingly
frustrated over Taiwan’s recalcitrance, and the sharp
words in the report should be taken as a sign that the
United States is not infinitely patient with wealthy
allies who seek to free ride on an increasingly
overstretched United States. If Taiwan’s opposition
parties continue to succeed in blocking adequate defense
measures, China could be emboldened, thus making a U.S.-PRC
military confrontation more likely.
The 2005 report is not entirely free from the dubious
vestiges of reports past. Historically, the DOD
estimates of
China's
defense spending have represented high-end outliers of a
wide range of other calculations. The 2005 report claims
that PRC defense spending in 2005 could reach $90
billion. That estimate is almost certainly overblown.
Indeed, one of
America's top experts
on the People's Liberation Army, James Mulvenon,
recently accused the Defense Department of making "wild
assed guesses" about PRC military spending that are "not
based on empirical fact." A recent Rand Corporation
report based on source material from China concluded
that an accurate figure would be between $31 and $38
billion. The new claim about $90 billion raises
questions about the Defense Department's methodology, to
say the least.
The chest-beating at the House Armed Services Committee
hearing over the Unocal deal should ring alarm bells in
American security circles. Demagoguing the China issue
may be useful for political purposes, but it can be
incredibly damaging to the U.S.-China diplomatic and
economic relationship. The fact is,
China
is a rising great power, and even if we wanted to, there
is little we could do to stop it. But by dispassionately
assessing
China's intent and capabilities, we can accommodate that
country's rise in a way that protects American interests
and defuses the risk of a conflict. The new tone of the
Defense Department's report seems to be a modest step in
the right direction.
Ted Galen Carpenter
is vice president for defense and foreign policy studies
at the Cato Institute. He is author of, most recently,
America’s Coming War with China: A Collision Course over
Taiwan (forthcoming, Palgrave/Macmillan). Justin Logan
is a research assistant at the Cato Institute.
Updated 8/16/05
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