Sunday, May 20, 2012

Chinese Debates of South China Sea Policy: Implications for Future Developments

his RSIS Working Paper issue no. 239 dated 17 May 2012 by Li Mingjiang entitled Chinese Debates of South China Sea Policy:Implications for Future Developments can be accessed by clicking: http://www.rsis.edu.sg/publications/workingpapers/wp239.pdf

No. 239 dated 17 May 2012

Chinese Debates of South China Sea Policy: Implications for Future Developments

By Li Mingjiang




The past few years have been an eventful period for the South China Sea dispute. The tensions and disputes and the consequential diplomatic pressures exerted on China have prompted an unprecedented debate among the foreign policy community in the country. Chinese policy-makers and analysts seriously reviewed other countries’ policies and deliberated on China’s appropriate responses and future policy options. This paper seeks to provide a comprehensive overview of the Chinese debate on three issues: (1) the ways various schools of thought have viewed the South China Sea dispute, (2) the types of policy proposals made, and (3) areas where consensus and disagreements exist. It also attempts to analyze how the debate relates to China’s official position and actual policy and behaviour in the dispute. From this comprehensive overview, we can derive some useful clues to better understand China’s response to the South China Sea dispute in the coming years.
Four notable themes have emerged from the Chinese debate. First, contrary to the widespread external criticism of China for its growing assertiveness, the predominant view among Chinese analysts is that all the tensions and disputes are mainly attributable to the collusion between the United States and regional claimant states. Second, it has been frequently proposed that China should be more proactive in the South China Sea in order to change its current reactive posture. It has been suggested that China can achieve this goal by taking initiatives in three areas: accelerating exploitation of resources in the South China Sea; restraining the involvement of the United States in the South China Sea issue; and exercising greater flexibility in adopting multilateralism to deal with various non-traditional security challenges in the South China Sea. Third, the majority of Chinese analysts and officials believe that the disputes in the South China Sea in the past few years have led to the worsening of China’s regional security environment. Fourth, there appears to be an emerging consensus that Beijing should practise a South China Sea policy that could be best characterized as non-confrontational assertiveness.

Click on the following link to download the working paper


http://www.rsis.edu.sg/publications/workingpapers/wp239.pdf

Bio


Dr. Li Mingjiang is an Assistant Professor at S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He is also the Coordinator of the China Program and the Coordinator of the MSc. in Asian Studies Program at RSIS. He received his Ph.D. in Political Science from Boston University. His main research interests include China’s diplomatic history, the rise of China in the context of East Asian regional relations and Sino-U.S. relations, and domestic sources of China’s international strategies. He is the author (including editor and co-editor) of 9 books. His recent books are Mao’s China and the Sino-Soviet Split (Routledge, 2012) and Soft Power: China’s Emerging Strategy in International Politics (Lexington-Rowman & Littlefield, 2009). He has published papers in various peer-reviewed journals including Global Governance, Cold War History, Journal of Contemporary China, The Chinese Journal of International Politics, China: An International Journal, China Security, Security Challenges, the International Spectator, and Panorama (Konrad Adenauer Stiftung). He frequently participates in various track-two forums in East Asia.

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