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2012-04-07
Asia's balance of power

China’s military rise

There are ways to reduce the threat to stability that an emerging superpower poses

NO MATTER how often China has emphasised the idea of a peaceful rise, the pace and nature of its military modernisation inevitably cause alarm. As America and the big European powers reduce their defence spending, China looks likely to maintain the past decade’s increases of about 12% a year. Even though its defence budget is less than a quarter the size of America’s today, China’s generals are ambitious. The country is on course to become the world’s largest military spender in just 20 years or so (see article).

Much of its effort is aimed at deterring America from intervening in a future crisis over Taiwan. China is investing heavily in “asymmetric capabilities” designed to blunt America’s once-overwhelming capacity to project power in the region. This “anti-access/area denial” approach includes thousands of accurate land-based ballistic and cruise missiles, modern jets with anti-ship missiles, a fleet of submarines (both conventionally and nuclear-powered), long-range radars and surveillance satellites, and cyber and space weapons intended to “blind” American forces. Most talked about is a new ballistic missile said to be able to put a manoeuvrable warhead onto the deck of an aircraft-carrier 2,700km (1,700 miles) out at sea.

China says all this is defensive, but its tactical doctrines emphasise striking first if it must. Accordingly, China aims to be able to launch disabling attacks on American bases in the western Pacific and push America’s carrier groups beyond what it calls the “first island chain”, sealing off the Yellow Sea, South China Sea and East China Sea inside an arc running from the Aleutians in the north to Borneo in the south. Were Taiwan to attempt formal secession from the mainland, China could launch a series of pre-emptive strikes to delay American intervention and raise its cost prohibitively.

This has already had an effect on China’s neighbours, who fear that it will draw them into its sphere of influence. Japan, South Korea, India and even Australia are quietly spending more on defence, especially on their navies. Barack Obama’s new “pivot” towards Asia includes a clear signal that America will still guarantee its allies’ security. This week a contingent of 200 US marines arrived in Darwin, while India took formal charge of a nuclear submarine, leased from Russia.

En garde

The prospect of an Asian arms race is genuinely frightening, but prudent concern about China’s build-up must not lapse into hysteria. For the moment at least, China is far less formidable than hawks on both sides claim. Its armed forces have had no real combat experience for more than 30 years, whereas America’s have been fighting, and learning, constantly. The capacity of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) for complex joint operations in a hostile environment is untested. China’s formidable missile and submarine forces would pose a threat to American carrier groups near its coast, but not farther out to sea for some time at least. Blue-water operations for China’s navy are limited to anti-piracy patrolling in the Indian Ocean and the rescue of Chinese workers from war-torn Libya. Two or three small aircraft-carriers may soon be deployed, but learning to use them will take many years. Nobody knows if the “carrier-killer” missile can be made to work.

As for China’s longer-term intentions, the West should acknowledge that it is hardly unnatural for a rising power to aspire to have armed forces that reflect its growing economic clout. China consistently devotes a bit over 2% of GDP to defence—about the same as Britain and France and half of what America spends. That share may fall if Chinese growth slows or the government faces demands for more social spending. China might well use force to stop Taiwan from formally seceding. Yet, apart from claims over the virtually uninhabited Spratly and Paracel Islands, China is not expansionist: it already has its empire. Its policy of non-interference in the affairs of other states constrains what it can do itself.

The trouble is that China’s intentions are so unpredictable. On the one hand China is increasingly willing to engage with global institutions. Unlike the old Soviet Union, it has a stake in the liberal world economic order, and no interest in exporting a competing ideology. The Communist Party’s legitimacy depends on being able to honour its promise of prosperity. A cold war with the West would undermine that. On the other hand, China engages with the rest of the world on its own terms, suspicious of institutions it believes are run to serve Western interests. And its assertiveness, particularly in maritime territorial disputes, has grown with its might. The dangers of military miscalculation are too high for comfort.

How to avoid accidents

It is in China’s interests to build confidence with its neighbours, reduce mutual strategic distrust with America and demonstrate its willingness to abide by global norms. A good start would be to submit territorial disputes over islands in the East and South China Seas to international arbitration. Another step would be to strengthen promising regional bodies such as the East Asian Summit and ASEAN Plus Three. Above all, Chinese generals should talk far more with American ones. At present, despite much Pentagon prompting, contacts between the two armed forces are limited, tightly controlled by the PLA and ritually frozen by politicians whenever they want to “punish” America—usually because of a tiff over Taiwan.

America’s response should mix military strength with diplomatic subtlety. It must retain the ability to project force in Asia: to do otherwise would feed Chinese hawks’ belief that America is a declining power which can be shouldered aside. But it can do more to counter China’s paranoia. To his credit, Mr Obama has sought to lower tensions over Taiwan and made it clear that he does not want to contain China (far less encircle it as Chinese nationalists fear). America must resist the temptation to make every security issue a test of China’s good faith. There are bound to be disagreements between the superpowers; and if China cannot pursue its own interests within the liberal world order, it will become more awkward and potentially belligerent. That is when things could get nasty.

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2012-4-7 11:40:35
【导读】中国威胁论在国际社会上存在已久且销路顺畅,随着中国综合国力的提升,国际影响力的加大,西方国家对中国的防备更是有增无减。是西方国家过于敏感还是中国的确野心勃勃?本周《经济学人》封面文章邀您谈论中国的军事崛起。

【注释】

1、prohibitively

     adv. 禁止地;过高地;过分地

2、hysteria

     n. 癔病,歇斯底里;不正常的兴奋

3、formidable

     adj. 强大的;可怕的;令人敬畏的;艰难的

4、expansionist

     adj. 扩张主义的

     n. 领土扩张论者;扩张主义者

5、assertiveness

     n. 魄力,自信
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2012-4-7 11:48:09
亚洲权力制衡

中国的军事崛起

有的是办法来减轻新兴超级大国带来的稳定威胁

无论中国怎样重申其和平崛起的立场,其军事现代化的速度和本质依旧不可避免地引起恐慌。相比美国和欧洲主要国家削减军费的举动,中国看似一如既往,每年增加12%的军费。即使今天,中国的军费预算不及美国的四分之一,但其军方显然雄心勃勃。倘若照这个速度发展下去,这一东方大国将在约20年后成为世界最大军事消费国。

其军事努力大抵是为了防止美国将来插手台湾问题。中国正大举投资其“以小博大”战略以阻止美国这一军事超级大国在亚洲地区部署力量。该“反介入/区域拒止”途径包括部署成千上万的精确制导陆基弹道导弹和巡航导弹,现代化战斗机和反舰导弹,潜艇舰队(包括传统潜艇和核潜艇),远程雷达和间谍卫星,以及致盲美国卫星和网络和太空武器。最常被提起的要数据称能够将机动性弹头射往2700公里(约合1700英里)外海域航空母舰甲板上的新型弹道导弹。

中国称这些举措均是防御性的,然而其战术理论却强调如有必要,先发制人。因此,中国的目的在于能够对美国在西太平洋的军事基地发起弱化攻击,并将美国的舰队驱至其所称的“第一海岛链”之外,从而将黄海,中国南海和中国东海封闭在北至阿留申群岛,南至加里曼丹岛北部的岛弧之内。倘若台湾试图脱离中国大陆正式独立,中国可能会发起一系列先发制人式打击以延缓美方进攻从而大幅提高美方这一举动的代价。

这已经对中国的邻国造成了影响,这些国家担忧中国会将他们卷入其势力范围。日本,韩国,印度乃至澳大利亚都在悄然增加军费,特别是海军军费。奥巴马的亚洲新“转向”就包括这样一个明确的信号:美国将保证其盟国的安全。本周,200名美国海军陆战队队员抵达澳大利亚达尔文港,而印度则正式从俄罗斯处租借核潜艇。

警戒

诚然,亚洲军备竞赛的前景令人恐惧,但对于中国崛起的谨慎关注不应沦为竭斯底里。至少目前,中国还远没有双方鹰派所称的那么强大。中国的武装部队已经逾30年未参加任何战斗,而美国的军队则不断地在战斗,学习。中国人民解放军在敌对环境下进行复杂的联合行动的能力还未接受过测试。中国强大的导弹和潜艇部队的确能在其近海对美国舰队造成威胁,但若在远海,就未必了。中国海军的蓝水行动还仅限于印度洋上的反海盗巡逻和从利比亚的战火中营救中国劳工。虽然中国将部署两到三艘小型航空母舰,但还需几年时间才能学会如何运用。且航母杀手导弹是否有效尚无可知。

至于中国的长远计划,西方应承认,对于一个正在崛起的国家来说,拥有与其不断增长的经济影响力相适应的武装力量是无可非议的。长期以来,中国将略高于其GDP2%的资金用于国防——大概与英法两国相当,约为美国的一半。倘若中国经济增长放缓或民众要求增加社会开销,这一比例还可能降低。中国也可能使用武力制止台湾独立。况且,除去宣布拥有实际上了无人烟的南沙和西沙群岛的主权,中国并不热衷于领土扩张:它已经建立起自己的统治。其无不干涉内政的对外政策也限制了自己的作为。

麻烦的是中国的意图总是让人捉摸不定。一方面,中国正愈发愿意参与全球性机构。与前苏联不同的是,中国与自由的世界经济秩序休戚相关,且对于意识形态输出兴致寥寥。共产党的合法性在于实现其经济发展的承诺,而与西方的冷战将有损于此。另一方面,中国以自己的方式与世界各国相联系,并对其认为是为西方利益服务的机构持怀疑态度。且其专断,特别是在海上领土纠纷问题上的专断大有与其力量共同增长之势。军事误判的危险太高,让人无法高枕无忧。

如何避免意外

建立与邻国间的互信,减少与美国的战略不信任及证明其愿意遵守国际准则都是符合中国利益的。将东海和南海岛屿领土争端提请国际仲裁会是一个好的开端。下一步也许是巩固东亚峰会和东盟加三等前景良好的国际组织。最重要的是,中国的军事将领应扩大与美国军方的对话。目前,除去五角大楼的推动,两国军方的接触还十分有限,紧紧掌握在中国人民解放军手中,并且只要中国政客想要“制裁”美国——通常是出于台湾问题上的小摩擦——这一关系就将象征性地受到冻结。

美国的反映通常是军事力量与外交手段的微妙结合。其应保持在亚洲规划军力的能力:否则会加强中国鹰派的信念,而他们一直认为正在陨落的美国应该靠边站了。但美国应多些作为来解除中国的偏执。奥巴马以他的信誉保证,他已着手缓解台海紧张局势,并明确表示他不会遏制中国发展(不像中国民族主义者所担忧的那样包围中国)。美国必须抵制将每个安全问题作为对中国诚意的测试的想法。超级大国之间难免有分歧,但倘若中国不在自由世界秩序的框架下追求自身利益,它将变得更尴尬,从而成为潜在的好战国。那时候一切就变得恶劣起来了。

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