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The Best Defense is a Good Offense
for China's Navy
James Holmes and Toshi Yoshihara
Western analysts are fond of describing Chinese foreign
policy in terms of the Great Wall. Built to halt
incursions along
China's
northern frontier, the wall was clearly meant for
defensive purposes. When they deploy the Great Wall
metaphor, Western commentators thus imply that
China will content
itself with defensive ends and means, more or less
permanently.
The unspoken assumption that Beijing will remain on the
defensive has tangible consequences for
U.S.
policy and military strategy in
East Asia. It bears
reexamining, lest Washington mistake Beijing's actions.
In The Great Wall and the Empty Fortress, for example,
Robert Ross and Andrew Nathan declare that China has
adopted a "Great Wall strategy" derived from "the
perception that one controls territory by surrounding
it." Beijing's military strategy, say Ross and Nathan,
"is one of protracted defensive resistance" which
concedes that likely opponents will have pronounced
edges in "mobility, concentrated force, and explosive
violence."
Will China apply this Great Wall logic to nearby waters?
If it attempts to "surround" and control these waters,
will Beijing adopt defensive strategies and tactics?
Yes, say Ross and Nathan. American naval mastery leaves
China no alternative: "The United States possesses
strategic superiority throughout Asia.
Its navy faces no challenger," least of all
China's.
Bernard Cole, the author of The Great Wall at Sea:
China's Navy Enters the Twenty-first Century, likewise
predicts that military weakness will force Beijing onto
the defensive. Just as Britain's Royal Navy once had to
worry about the menace to its battleships from German
torpedoes—even in its home waters—so the Chinese navy
has to worry about the safety of its warships if they
venture beyond China's territorial seas. Declares Cole,
the Chinese navy is capable of "nothing more than
expanded coastal defense," unable to defend the sea
lines of communication outside China's immediate
environs.
These analysts see little reason to expect
China,
historically a continental power, to turn its attentions
seaward. But their predictions of Chinese passivity do
not hold up under scrutiny. To see why not, consult Mao
Zedong, who inscribed his distinctive strategic outlook
on contemporary
China through his
writings on political and military affairs.
Mao scorned the notion of passive defense, "a spurious
kind of defense," insisting instead that "the only real
defense is active defense." By this he meant "defense
for the purpose of counter-attacking and taking the
offensive." For Mao, even defensive aims were best
attained by offensive means. "Protracted defensive
resistance," as envisaged by Ross and Nathan, was at
most a temporary expedient—not the core of China's
national military strategy.
That goes for sea as well as land combat. Taking their
cue from Mao, Chinese strategists routinely talk of
"offshore active defense," a strategy predicated on
wresting control of the waters within the "first island
chain"—roughly speaking, the series of islands that
parallels China's coastlines, from the Ryukyus through
Taiwan through the northern Philippines—from the U.S.
Navy. And they intend to do so by offensive means.
What does offshore active defense mean in practice? The
concept of "sea denial"—a critical tenet of sea
power—supplies perhaps the best indicator of the future
of Chinese maritime strategy. A navy intent on sea
denial seeks to establish conditions that deter or
prevent an adversary from operating within a given
nautical expanse for an extended period of time.
Sea denial is generally a strategically defensive stance
taken by inferior naval powers. But the operations and
tactics involved are often offensively oriented—an
approach philosophically in tune with Mao, whose famous
essay "On Protracted War" recommended using offensive
means to achieve defensive ends.
The Chinese military already possesses or plans to
acquire the capabilities needed to execute a sea-denial
strategy. Since the early 1990s, China has embarked on
an arms buying spree from Russia while pressing ahead
with its own indigenous programs. The result: a leap in
offensive combat power.
Today China's order of battle boasts platforms well
suited for sea denial, including sophisticated
destroyers, submarines, ballistic and cruise missiles,
and naval fighter/attack aircraft. If they package these
assets wisely and develop the requisite tactical
proficiency, the Chinese will gain confidence in their
ability to at least give pause to any foreign power that
contemplates hostile entry into their littoral waters.
Why would China want to deny access to foreign powers
within the first island chain? In recent years Chinese
strategists have taken to extolling the virtues of
"absolute control" over the nation's maritime periphery.
China's economic well-being relies increasingly on
shipborne deliveries of Middle East oil and gas. As its
ideological appeal declines, the Communist Party has
staked its political survival on improving the standard
of living for Chinese citizens.
Chinese leaders believe their rule depends on secure sea
lanes.
While Beijing has thus far relied on American guarantees
of freedom on the high seas to safeguard vital seagoing
traffic, it is less and less willing to free ride. What
great power would entrust its vital interests to a
foreign power if it had the wherewithal to fend for
itself? No clear-headed Chinese statesman would count on
American goodwill indefinitely, given the erratic course
of Sino-U.S. relations.
Like Ross, Nathan, and Cole, American military officials
habitually deprecate China's naval prowess. For them it
is a virtual article of faith that
America
will continue to rule the waves indefinitely. Worrisome
trends in Chinese strategic thought and capabilities
should dampen such confidence, which verges on hubris.
It is high time to rethink the hypothesis that the
United States will effortlessly dominate the seas near
China, a rising great power.
Premised as it is on the notion of perpetual Chinese
inferiority at sea, the conventional wisdom concerning
Chinese naval power is out of sync with emerging
realities. Beijing is not fated to remain on the
defensive at sea, any more than it was fated to remain
on the defensive ashore during the Mao Zedong era. If it
takes China lightly, the United States may one day find
itself walled out of East Asian waterways.
James Holmes is a
senior research associate at the University of Georgia
Center for International Trade and Security and an
international-affairs instructor in the University's
Honors Program. Toshi Yoshihara is a visiting professor
of strategy at the U.S. Air War College and a senior
research fellow at the Institute for Foreign Policy
Analysis. The views expressed here are not necessarily
those of the U.S. Air Force or the U.S. Department of
Defense.
Updated 6/7/05
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