BEIJING—Even before a ruling, China may have lost by refusing to cooperate with a UN arbitration tribunal over its South China Sea claims.
Yet Beijing seems prepared to absorb the cost to its reputation, confident that in territory and resources, it won’t lose a thing.
Despite pressure from Washington and the international community, China appears determined to avoid granting any hint of legitimacy to a process that might challenge its claim to ownership of virtually the entire South China Sea, including its islands, reefs, fish stocks and potentially rich reserves of oil and gas.
The collateral cost: harm to global efforts to resolve similar territorial disputes through legal means.
By its actions, China is demonstrating that countries can reject such measures whenever they conflict with their interests.
The case before the United Nations Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague tribunal, filed by the Philippines, centers on the applicability of China’s vaguely drawn “nine-dash line” South China Sea boundary under the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea, or Unclos.
Ruling by July 7
A decision is expected by July 7, but since there is no enforcement mechanism, the ruling’s potential impact is unclear.
Along with China and the Philippines, four other countries—Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam—also claim islands and reefs falling within the nine-dash line, while Indonesia has expressed concern about the Chinese boundary overlapping with its exclusive economic zone.
For months, Chinese officials, state media outlets and high-ranking military officers have maintained a relentless stream of invectives against the Philippines’ pursuit of arbitration, calling it unlawful, illegitimate and a “political farce.”
“The South China Sea arbitration unilaterally initiated by the Philippines is nothing but a political scheme for one party to insult the other and will be recorded as an infamous case in the history of international law,” Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told a group of visiting reporters in Beijing earlier this month.
Worthy of derision
That the panel is headed by a former diplomat from China’s old nemesis, Japan, makes it even more worthy of derision, Chinese critics say.
“The ruling can’t be objective and fair, and we won’t be giving up our historical rights simply to make China look good,” said Wu Shicun, president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies.
Seeking to win over global opinion, both China and chief Philippine ally the United States have been lining up friendly nations to back their positions.
Yet, with the exception of Russia, which has been expelled from the G-7 and is under heavy international sanctions, those who support Beijing’s claims are mostly small states from outside the region with little influence over the dispute.
No-win situation
Even government-backed scholars such as Wu say that the case is a no-win situation for China.
“Whatever the result, this is a definite loss for China since we’ve been forced to assume a passive role,” Wu said.
Regardless of China’s arguments denying the panel’s legality, it “will damage China’s reputation and image,” said Yun Sun, an expert on Chinese foreign policy at the US Stimson Center think tank.
According to Sun, however, that’s a relatively small price to pay to retain control over the “tangible real territory,” far more important than any question of “face.”
“Given the stakes in oil, natural resources and strategic depth, I suspect the Chinese government is willing to pay that price,” agreed Michael Desch, codirector of the International Security Program at the University of Notre Dame in the United States.
Despite its island-building efforts and military buildup in the South China Sea, China has shown some signs of restraint in not expanding its claims or vigorously seeking to eject other countries’ militaries from islands it claims.
While it has barred the Philippines from the disputed Panatag Shoal (Scarborough Shoal) ever since winning a 2013 maritime standoff, China has shown no recent signs of carrying out the sort of massive reclamation work there that it has on other coral reefs, including building ports and airstrips atop them.
Conduct of parties
That may be an attempt to retain some credibility over its repeated evocations of the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea signed between China and the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).
That document states that parties concerned “undertake to resolve their territorial and jurisdictional disputes by peaceful means, without resorting to the threat or use of force.”
Its reference to the use of “friendly consultations and negotiations by sovereign states directly concerned,” underscores China’s insistence that bilateral negotiations are the only way forward, something critics call a transparent attempt to divide the disputants and keep the dispute off the agenda of multilateral mechanisms.
Bilateral talks
China appears to be holding out the possibility of coaxing the Philippines into bilateral talks that have so far gone nowhere.
Philippine President-elect Rodrigo Duterte has shown indications of being more flexible on the issue than outgoing President Aquino. AP