4-star admiral wants to confront China. The White House says not so fast.
September 26, 2016
(Photo Credit: MC3 Jesse Monford/Navy)
Editor's note: This article was originally posted on April 6 and was republished Sept. 26 on the new Navytimes.com website.
The U.S. military's top commander in the Pacific is arguing behind closed doors for a more confrontational approach to counter and reverse China's strategic gains in the South China Sea, appeals that have met resistance from the White House at nearly every turn.
The U.S. military's top commander in the Pacific is arguing behind closed doors for a more confrontational approach to counter and reverse China's strategic gains in the South China Sea, appeals that have met resistance from the White House at nearly every turn.
Adm. Harry Harris is proposing a muscular U.S. response to China's
island-building that may include launching aircraft and conducting
military operations within 12 miles of these man-made islands, as part
of an effort to stop what he has called the "Great Wall of Sand" before
it extends within 140 miles from the Philippines' capital, sources say.
Harris and his U.S. Pacific Command have been waging a persistent
campaign in public and in private over the past several months to raise
the profile of China's land grab, accusing China outright in February of
militarizing the South China Sea.
But the Obama administration, with just nine months left in office, is
looking to work with China on a host of other issues from nuclear
non-proliferation to an ambitious trade agenda, experts say, and would
prefer not to rock the South China Sea boat, even going so far as to
muzzle Harris and other military leaders in the run-up to a security
summit.
"They want to get out of office with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of
cooperation with China," said Jerry Hendrix, a retired Navy captain and
defense strategy analyst with the Center for a New American Security.
The White House has sought to tamp down on rhetoric from Harris and
other military leaders, who are warning that China is consolidating its
gains to solidify sovereignty claims to most of the South China Sea.
National Security Adviser Susan Rice imposed a gag order on military
leaders over the disputed South China Sea in the weeks running up to the
last week's high-level nuclear summit, according to two defense
officials who asked for anonymity to discuss policy deliberations.
China's president, Xi Jinping, attended the summit, held in Washington,
and met privately with President Obama.
The order was part of the notes from a March 18 National Security
Council meeting and included a request from Rice to avoid public
comments on China's recent actions in the South China Sea, said a
defense official familiar with the meeting readout.
In issuing the gag order, Rice intended to give Presidents Obama and Xi
Jinping "maximum political maneuvering space" during their one-on-one
meeting during the global Nuclear Summit held March 31 through April 1,
the official said.
"Sometimes it's OK to talk about the facts and point out what China is
doing, and other times it's not," the official familiar with the memo
said. "Meanwhile, the Chinese have been absolutely consistent in their
messaging."
The NSC dictum has had a "chilling effect" within the Pentagon that
discouraged leaders from talking publicly about the South China Sea at
all, even beyond the presidential summit, according to a second defense
official familiar with operational planning. Push-back from the NSC has
become normal in cases where it thinks leaders have crossed the line
into baiting the Chinese into hard-line positions, sources said.
Military leaders interpreted this as an order to stay silent on China's
assertive moves to control most of the South China Sea, said both
defense officials, prompting concern that the paltry U.S. response may
embolden the Chinese and worry U.S. allies in the region, like Japan and
the Philippines, who feel bullied.
China, which has been constructing islands and airstrips atop reefs and
rocky outcroppings in the Spratly Islands, sees the South China Sea as
Chinese territory. President Xi told Obama during their meeting at the
nuclear summit that China would not accept any behavior in the disguise
of freedom of navigation that violates its sovereignty, according to a
Reuters report. The two world leaders did agree to work together on
nuclear and cyber security issues.
Experts say administrations often direct military leaders to tone down
their rhetoric ahead of major talks, but the current directive comes at a
difficult juncture. U.S. leaders are struggling to find an effective
approach to stopping the island-building without triggering a
confrontation.
The NSC frequently takes top-down control to send a coherent message,
said Bryan Clark a former senior aide to Adm. Jon Greenert, the recently
retired chief of naval operations. While serving as Greenert's aide,
Clark said the NSC regularly vetted the former CNO's statements on China
and the South China Sea.
Critics say the administration's wait-and-see approach to the South
China Sea has failed, with the island-dredging continuing in full force.
"The White House's aversion to risk has resulted in an indecisive
policy that has failed to deter China's pursuit of maritime hegemony
while confusing and alarming our regional allies and partners," said
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., chairman of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, in a statement to Navy Times. "China's increasingly coercive
challenge to the rules-based international order must be met with a
determined response that demonstrates America's resolve and reassures
the region of our commitment."
When presented with the findings of this article, Harris declined to
comment through a spokesperson. A spokesman for the chief of naval
operations had no comment when asked about Harris' proposals and whether
the CNO was supporting them.
An administration official said the Navy's operations in the South
China Sea are routine and that the administration often seeks to
coordinate its message.
"While we're not going to characterize the results of deliberative
meetings, it's no secret that we coordinate messaging across the
inter-agency-on issues related to China as well as every other priority
under the sun," the official said.
The gag order has had at least one intended effect. The amphibious
assault ship Boxer and the dock landing ship Harpers Ferry, both
carrying the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit, steamed through the South
China Sea in late March to little fanfare.
'The status quo has changed'
Meanwhile evidence is mounting that China aims to build another island
atop the Scarborough Shoal, an atoll just 140 miles off the coast of the
Philippines' capital of Manila and well within the Philippines'
200-mile economic exclusion zone, that would extend China's claims.
Chinese missile batteries and air-search radars there would put U.S.
forces in the Philippines at risk in a crisis.
Harris and PACOM officials have been lobbying the National Security
Council, Capitol Hill and Pentagon leaders to send a clear message that
they won't tolerate continued bullying of neighbors. Part of the
approach includes more aggressive, frequent and close patrols of China's
artificial islands, Navy Times has learned.
"When it comes to the South China Sea, I think the largest military
concern for [U.S.] Pacific Command is what operational situation will be
left to the next commander or the commander after that," said a Senate
staffer familiar with the issues in the South China Sea.
"The status quo is clearly being changed. Militarization at Scarborough
Shoal would give [China's People's Liberation Army-Navy] the ability to
hold Subic Bay, Manila Bay, and the Luzon Strait at risk with coastal
defense cruise missiles or track aviation assets moving in or out of the
northern Philippines."
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