The following is my response to the first comment from Anonymous (of
August 16, 2021) concerning Submarine Matters Second Report to Donors.
First, thank you for your fulsome praise. I
appreciate it.
What the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue discussers may or may not do
if/when China invades Taiwan cannot be gamed, because the Quad is only a dialogue,
not a solid organisation. I over-egged the status of the Quad in the Second Report, because I want it to expand into an Indo-Pacic NATO eventually.
In the academic and intelligence world looking for
clarity is frequently frustrated by realities. Understanding complex world
events is less a science and more an art based on experience – of which I humbly
have 40 years in both worlds. The surprise fall of the Warsaw Pact Iron Curtain
defied the best laid expectations, arguments and imaginations of many thousands
of PhD Kremlinologists in Western academia and “intelligence”. In 1989 (fall of the Berlin Wall) I was 28 and everyone was surprised
even though Poland’s Solidarity had been active for almost a decade.
The US may be even less likely to strike Chinese territory than in 1953 when Chinese and US/UN troops were actually fighting each other in Korea. Ever since Truman sacked MacArthur (when Mac was seeking to hijack
Presidential policy in wanting to fight China on Chinese territory) China has grown vastly more powerful economically and militarily (in conventional and nuclear terms).
That said China is an even more complex case than Cold War Soviet Russia ever was, because not only is China on the way to being a conventional and nuclear military Superpower
perhaps within 10 years, it is it may even have the world’s largest economy in
10 years. Many countries may forgive China its military transgressions if Belt
and Road enriches their economies.
The Quadrilateral Security discussers are nowhere near being a NATO. The Quad does not constitute
an alliance or a treaty even if I implied it in the Second Report. Nothing is written down. No formal members, no guarantees,
no tripwires or promises that a Chinese attack on one country will be
considered an attack on all.
The Quad Dialogue
is aspirational – a vague warning to China that countries may band together
against Chinese military aggression. China’s ecomic power might always buy
countries off instead of going to war.
In my Second Report I subscribe to increasing US
Government moves in 2020-2021 that there should be an Indo-Pacific (aka "Asian") NATO. The Quad demonstration of ambiguous solidarity
has found expression in the US Trump and Biden administrations organising Indo-Pacific
countries to do Freedom of Navigations Operations (FONOPs) in
the South China Sea (SCS). US administrations have also persuaded NATO countries
to “pivot” to the Indo-Pacific by also doing FONOPs in the SCS. While India has been mentioned as the second most powerful Quad discusser it has never seen itself as a junior ally of
the US (like Australia and Japan are) and won’t surrender its freedom of action if/when China attacks Taiwan.
“A major question here is does China have further
ambitions?” Maybe, maybe not.
The Quad Dialogue is a Dialogue – nothing solid with credibility to “retain”.
America may be unique in having a Presidency that can
literally be bought by a non-politician, who, once he lost his inherited $100,000,000s relied on Russian-Putin money to bail him out of bankruptcy. I hope the other Five Eye countries and Japan have higher
democratic standards.
Unlike Tibet and Hong Kong, Taiwan is likely to be a
tougher domino, but China could still buy it.
I think Chinese territory should only be damaged or its ports and sea lanes blockaded if China proves itself that aggressive first.
My second response will be to Anonymous's second comment of August 16, 2021, which is pitched more at the tactical and weapon (submarines, mines, UUVs, etc) level.
Thanks Pete
ReplyDeleteFor the thoughtful reply.
Yeah, the Quad is wishful thinking now, but I sort of hope that Chinese ambition would give it a bit of backbone. This would not require opening fire: (combined) FONOPS patrols in the South China Sea, and maybe even in the Strait of Taiwan would be a bit of a restraining influence, especially if also supported by UK, France, Germany, etc.
As for attacking China, I never considered that an option. I would be happy if the proper naval equipment would be made available to Taiwan to shut down the shipping lanes, to be deployed once China started a blockade of Taiwan. Privately owned and insured 100,000 ton container ships would be reluctant to cross minefields.
As for cruise missile attacks on Chinese logistics, I would imagine these would also be Taiwanese, deployed from fiber optic networked undersea capsules, to be launched once a shooting war started.
I have an gut fear of war between nuclear superpowers. That said, neither Vietnam or Afghanistan are nuclear, yet both defeated nuclear superpowers. Afghanistan defeated two. In both of these cases, this was done by out-lasting the opponent.
These wars are so bloody that no allies of the smaller power are likely to stick around (at least for the shooting war) but sheer stubborn spite can wear down a large opponent without inviting a nuclear strike. Of course, nobody knows how the Taiwanese will act, especially if they are correctly armed and prepared, and China understanding this difficulty is my only hope for averting war.
Regards
Thanks Anonymous
ReplyDeleteAs a Quad naval exercise postscript.
Australia's 9News, Aug 24, 2021 reports https://www.9news.com.au/national/australian-warship-to-join-exercise-malabar-naval-exercise/2f16de02-da78-48da-89fb-d5011693425a
"An Australian warship is joining naval ships and aircraft from regional partners in a major military exercise off the island of Guam.
The Anzac-class frigate HMAS Warramunga is taking part in Exercise MALABAR this week along with naval forces from INDIA, JAPAN and the US.
Vice-Admiral Michael Noonan, of the Royal Australian Navy, said the military drills will help strengthen the four nations' role in building Indo-Pacific security.
"Australia is committed to working closely with our partners to address shared regional challenges, including in the maritime domain," Vice-Admiral Noonan said.
"Our forces' participation in Exercise MALABAR 2021 will enhance the region's maritime interoperability and is a key cooperative activity between us."
Guam lies 3000km south-east of Shanghai in China and [9News incorrectly reports] "the closest military base to China." [US-Japan Naval Base, Yokosuka, Japan, and US-South Korean Busan Naval Base, South Korea, are geographically far closer to China]
"...The four-day military drills begin on Thursday and will involve forces from the four nations conducting live firings and anti-submarine warfare operations.
This is the second consecutive year that Australia has participated in Exercise MALABAR.
The US India, Japan and Australia are part of the Quad regional [DISCUSSION, NOT A] alliance established in response to China's growing economic and military strength."