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THE SOUTH CHINA SEA DOG THAT HASN’T BARKED … YET

Zack Cooper and Gregory Poling
June 18, 2024
Commentary



Vietnam has been busy. In recent months, it has exponentially expanded the size
of several features it controls in the Spratly Islands, including Barque Canada
Reef, Namyit Island, Pearson Reef, and Discovery Great Reef. China appears to
have allowed these expansion efforts to occur largely unmolested. And yet,
elsewhere in the Spratlys at Second Thomas Shoal, Beijing is preventing the
Philippines from supplying food, water, and limited building supplies to the
handful of Filipino personnel on the Sierra Madre, a Philippine Navy ship
grounded at the shoal in 1999. Why have Chinese leaders chosen to take such a
hard line against resupply efforts by the Philippines while permitting Vietnam’s
large-scale island building at multiple nearby features?


VIETNAMESE LAND RECLAMATION AT BARQUE CANADA REEF (COURTESY CSIS AMTI AND MAXAR
2024)

There are at least four plausible explanations for China’s behavior. First,
Chinese authorities may feel that they are already engaged in a struggle with
the Philippines in the South China Sea and want to avoid a second major standoff
at the same time. There is precedent for this behavior. In the past, China
sometimes avoided engaging in coercion against multiple neighbors at the same
time. However, the opposite has also been true — for instance, with China
pushing hard on South China Sea, East China Sea, and Himalayan disputes all at
once in the early years of General Secretary Xi Jinping’s rule. Still, with
considerable problems at home and abroad, perhaps Beijing wants to avoid the
additional public criticism that it would provoke for simultaneously using force
against multiple claimants. In this sense, Vietnam might have chosen the perfect
time to move, when China was already busy around Second Thomas Shoal and
Scarborough Shoal and therefore hoping to avoid other entanglements elsewhere in
the Spratlys. This explanation might be part of the puzzle, but it is most
compelling if China also believes that coercion against Vietnam would be
diplomatically damaging and unlikely to succeed.

 

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That brings up the second possibility: Leaders in Beijing may believe that
Vietnam is much more likely than the Philippines to escalate if China contests
its actions, creating a crisis its leaders do not want. Private conversations
with Chinese officials and experts suggest that many are convinced the
Philippines will buckle if Beijing applies enough pressure. They cite China’s
escalation dominance and a history of Philippine acquiescence to Chinese
pressure, especially during the previous administration of Rodrigo Duterte.
Chinese talking points also consistently frame the Philippines as lacking agency
in the disputes, painting it as a mere dupe of the United States maneuvered into
confrontation with Beijing. The current government in Manila therefore has to
prove that it will not fold to pressure and that it is the one calling the
shots, not the Americans. Hanoi, on the other hand, has nothing to prove on that
front given its history of accepting substantial risk to push back against
Beijing.


VIETNAMESE LAND RECLAMATION AT SOUTH REEF (COURTESY CSIS AMTI AND MAXAR 2024)

For instance, Vietnam kept pressure on China during a months-long standoff over
a Chinese oil rig in 2014 — including after a Vietnamese fishing boat sank. Long
before that, Vietnam confronted China’s first moves into the Spratlys in 1988 by
occupying more than a dozen rocks and reefs to keep them out of Beijing’s hands.
That ultimately led to the brief — and for Vietnam, bloody — Battle of Johnson
Reef. And beyond the South China Sea, there was the Sino-Vietnam border war of
1979, in which the unexpected doggedness of Vietnamese resistance, and high
casualties, forced China’s military into an early withdrawal. Cross-border
hostilities continued for the better part of the next decade. The few generals
serving today in China’s military with any combat experience, like Central
Military Commission members Zhang Youxia and Liu Zhenli, earned it fighting
Vietnamese troops. So Beijing likely knows that if Hanoi has decided this
construction is a military necessity, it will not back down to gray zone
coercion and will accept considerable risk of escalation. That may be
successfully deterring China today.

Third, and relatedly, China may be treating Vietnam differently than the
Philippines due to the latter’s formal treaty alliance with the United States.
The logic of allying with a stronger country is that doing so should better
deter challenges from adversaries. But in this case, Vietnam may
counterintuitively be benefitting by not being a U.S. treaty ally. In short,
Chinese leaders may feel that Vietnam’s land reclamation poses less of a threat
than even much smaller actions by the Philippines because it is unlikely that
American forces would benefit from them directly. Although it is unlikely that
the small Philippine outpost at Second Thomas Shoal would be militarily useful
for U.S. forces, Chinese leaders may worry more about Manila’s actions due to
the alliance. If this is true, then Hanoi’s nonalignment could be an attractive
model for other countries seeking to protect their interests amid heightened
U.S.-Chinese competition.


VIETNAMESE LAND RECLAMATION AT CENTRAL REEF (COURTESY CSIS AMTI AND MAXAR 2024)

Fourth, Chinese leaders may be treating Vietnamese counterparts differently
given the longstanding cooperative relationship between Beijing and Hanoi. The
party-to-party links between the two communist states remain robust, albeit more
distrustful than outsiders sometimes assume (see the history of conflict above).
Still, Chinese officials may be less comfortable instigating a crisis with
Vietnam at a time when it faces so much pressure from the world’s liberal
democracies. The Vietnamese Communist Party is also historically uncomfortable
pursuing the kind of public naming and shaming campaign in which the Philippines
is engaged. Hanoi prefers to communicate more quietly with Beijing while leaving
it to outsiders (often with quiet Vietnamese encouragement) to impose public
pressure. This has led to speculation that China is reacting more harshly to
Philippine activities than to those of Vietnam because of anger over Manila’s
efforts to publicize Chinese bad behavior. That may be true, but it seems more a
contributing factor than a full explanation of Beijing’s behavior.

There are many other questions surrounding Vietnam’s actions. What prompted
Vietnam to significantly expand its island building at this moment? Did Hanoi
expect that Beijing would be so restrained in response? And how will U.S. and
regional officials respond to Vietnam’s actions? To date, most have demurred,
with the spokesperson of the Philippine Coast Guard saying Manila does not
object to Vietnam’s island expansion because, unlike China, it has not been used
to coerce other states. These are all important questions, but understanding the
logic behind China’s (lack of) response is especially critical because it might
help decipher Beijing’s response to future activities.


VIETNAMESE LAND RECLAMATION AT NAMYIT ISLAND (COURTESY CSIS AMTI AND MAXAR 2024)

In recent months, a number of American and Chinese experts have asserted that
the escalation risks in the South China Sea are higher even than those in the
Taiwan Strait. Indeed, if Beijing is preparing a military response to Hanoi’s
land reclamation, then this could trigger a bloody conflict akin to that which
occurred in the Paracel Islands 50 years ago. Conversely, if Chinese leaders are
content to permit Vietnam’s massive land reclamation in the South China Sea,
then perhaps they are bluffing at Second Thomas Shoal and Philippine leaders
need only demonstrate clearly their willingness to escalate. These diametrically
opposed conclusions can both be supported by current circumstances, since we do
not know what has driven China’s muted response to Vietnam’s island building in
the Spratlys. Deciphering Beijing’s logic should therefore be a top priority for
both government officials and outside researchers, as it will provide valuable
lessons about the likelihood of conflict in the months and years ahead.

 

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Zack Cooper is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and co-host
of the Net Assessment podcast for War on the Rocks.

Greg Poling directs the Southeast Asia Program and Asia Maritime Transparency
Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and is the
author of On Dangerous Ground: America’s Century in the South China Sea.

Image: Vietnamese Government

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