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 Cold War in Warm Waters:  US-China's Dangerous Contest for Asia-Pacific
	   By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 27, 2011 
 On two occasions in my life I found myself living close to the 
	  South China Sea. The sea became my escape from life’s pressing 
	  responsibilities. But there is no escaping the fact that the deceptively 
	  serene waters are now also grounds for a nascent but real new cold war.
 
 China takes the name of the sea very seriously. Its claim over 
	  the relatively massive water body – laden with oil, natural gas and 
	  other resources – is perhaps ‘ill-defined’, per the account of the BBC 
	  (Nov 3, 2011), but it is also very serious. Countries such as Vietnam, the 
	  Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei are uneasy but are caught in a bind. 
	  China’s growing regional influence – to some, perhaps ‘encroaching 
	  hegemony’ – is an uncontested fact of life. To challenge - or 
	  balance - the rising Chinese power, these countries face a most difficult 
	  choice: accepting China’s supremacy or embracing an intractable American 
	  return to the region. The latter option is particularly worrisome 
	  considering the US’s poor military track record throughout the 
	  Asia-Pacific region.
 
 Frankly, there is little choice in the 
	  matter for small, vulnerable countries. A conflict is already brewing, and 
	  China, emboldened by astonishing economic growth as well as military 
	  advancement, seems to be gearing up to challenge the US’s uncontested 
	  military dominance in the region.
 
 Despite efforts to slash the 
	  defense budget by $487 billion in the next ten years, the US sees the 
	  Asia-Pacific region as its last major holdout outside NATO’s traditional 
	  geographic influence. In fact, last January the Defense Department had 
	  announced its plans to remove two of four US combat brigades stationed in 
	  Europe. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta tried to assure US NATO allies that 
	  the US remained committed to Europe’s security, and that the move was 
	  merely part of a new strategy of ‘smart defense’. But the writing on the 
	  wall was crystal clear.
 
 “If we look behind the slogan of smart 
	  defense, I would say that at least 20 years ago all these ideas were on 
	  the table,” according to Thomas Enders, CEO of Airbus. “So why is this 
	  time different? It could be austerity. But...the NATO members, 
	  particularly the Europeans will not spend more on defense for the 
	  foreseeable future, say 10 years” (Reuters, Feb 4).
 
 Teetering at 
	  the brink of economic depression and bankruptcy, and forced into making 
	  unprecedented austerity decisions, the US and its NATO allies have already 
	  crossed all sorts of uncharted territories. Panetta’s assurances will 
	  hardly erase the comments made by Defense Secretary Robert Gates last June 
	  foretelling a “dim, if not dismal future for the transatlantic alliance.” 
	  However, it is very telling that despite budget cuts and the downgrading 
	  of US military presence in Europe, the US will be shifting its focus to 
	  the Asia-Pacific. This was the gist of President Obama’s announcement of 
	  new military strategy last month.
 
 In his recent remarks before 
	  the Senate Armed Service Committee, Panetta said the US planned to keep a 
	  rotational military presence in Australia and the Philippines. However, 
	  due to China’s growing economic might and direct sway over US’s own 
	  economy, US officials are less daring when explaining their renewed 
	  interests the region.
 
 The fear of China’s dominance is at the 
	  center of US foreign policy of the Asia-Pacific region. It is a fight that 
	  China cannot lose. For a declining empire like the US, the fight is also 
	  central to American strategy aimed at maintaining a level of global 
	  hegemony - especially where the US still claims few allies. On his last 
	  Asian tour last month, Panetta was emphatic that the US return to Asia 
	  was not a temporary political maneuver. “I want to make very clear that 
	  the United States is going to remain a presence in the Pacific for a long 
	  time...If anything, we're going to strengthen our presence in the 
	  Pacific,” he said. This message had been asserted earlier, although in 
	  different contexts, by Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and President 
	  Obama himself.
 
 A direct confrontation remains unlikely because of 
	  the economic interests shared by both China and the US. That said, the 
	  symbiotic relationship is now becoming increasingly imbalanced in favor of 
	  China. In his recent visit to the US, Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping 
	  told business leaders that the US should not push China too far in the 
	  Asia-Pacific region. “We hope the US will truly respect the interests and 
	  concerns of countries in the region, including China,” he said (USA Today, 
	  Feb 15). Compared to other visits by top Chinese leaders, Xi received less 
	  reprimand, an indication of a shift in US diplomacy regarding China.
 However, it’s worth noting that official US statements regarding the 
	  Asia-Pacific region – often made by departments of state, commerce and 
	  trade - are becoming increasingly fused with statements made by military 
	  leaders, a sign of creeping danger.
 
 The South China Sea is, in 
	  particular, a contentious issue. The US is obviously interested in the 
	  resource-rich body for economic and strategic reasons. For China, it is 
	  additionally a matter of national pride. The Chinese message to Western 
	  and other companies is to stay away from areas that China sees as its 
	  territorial waters. “We hope foreign companies do not get involved in 
	  disputed waters for oil and gas exploration and development,” said a 
	  foreign ministry spokesman.
 
 The race for supremacy over Asia is 
	  being renewed, this time with China more forceful than ever. The South 
	  China Sea is likely to emerge as major point of contention in coming 
	  years. Leaders of adjacent countries might find themselves being forced to 
	  choose sides in a foreseeable conflict over resources and military 
	  presence.
 
 It was Deng Xiaoping who championed China’s economic 
	  reforms throughout the 1980s. Then China was seen too amiable – if not 
	  disaster-prone - to ever articulate and defend a clear foreign policy 
	  agenda. Those days are over, and the US has taken serious note of that.
 “There are challenges facing the Asia-Pacific right now that demand 
	  America's leadership (and the 21st century will be) America's Pacific 
	  century,” declared Hilary Clinton prior to the APEC summit in Hawaii last 
	  November (Xinhua, Nov 19).
 
 Understandably, her comments raised 
	  the alarm throughout Chinese media that a cold war is officially underway. 
	  While the giants are now contending in the open, smaller and less 
	  influential countries in the region are being exposed to all sorts of 
	  bleak possibilities.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	  is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	  PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom 
	  Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
   
 
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