War With China?
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
I
regard a war with China – hot or cold – as perhaps the greatest
strategic blunder the United States could make, beyond those it
has already made. The end result would be the same as that from
the 20th century wars between Britain and Germany: it
reduced both to second-rate powers. In the 21st century,
the real victors would be the non-state forces of the Fourth Generation,
who would fill the gap created by the reduction of both Chinese
and American power.
Given
my foreboding – in George W. Bush’s Washington, it seems the rule
is that any blunder we can make, we will make – I was struck by
the title of Robert D. Kaplan’s article in the June Atlantic
Monthly, "How We Would Fight China." Kaplan has written
some excellent material on the breakdown of the state and the rise
of non-state elements.
Here,
however, I think he gets it wrong. Kaplan sees the 21st
century being defined by a new Cold War between China and the United
States, rather than the clash between states and non-state forces.
I believe this phenomenon will be far more century-shaping than
any conflict between states.
While
Kaplan writes about how the U.S. could use naval power – subtly
– to contain a rising China, within the framework of a Bismarckian
Realpolitik that accommodates everyone’s interests, he recognizes
the danger to all of a Cold War turning hot. He writes, "Only
a similarly pragmatic approach (similar to Bismarck’s) will allow
us to accommodate China’s inevitable re-emergence as a great power.
The alternative will be to turn the earth of the twenty-first century
into a battleground."
Regrettably,
there are influential voices in Washington that want a war with
China, the sooner the better. The most likely cause is Taiwan. Few
in Washington understand why China is so adamant about Taiwan remaining
officially part of China. The reason is China’s history, throughout
which her greatest threat has not been foreign invasion but internal
division. China has often fractured, sometimes into many parts.
Today, Beijing fears that if one province, Taiwan, achieves independence,
others will follow. China will go to war, including with the United
States, to prevent that from happening.
Correctly,
Kaplan observes that China is not able to successfully fight a sea
and air war with America:
China
has committed itself to significant military spending, but its navy
and air force will not be able to match ours for some decades. The
Chinese are therefore not going to do us the favor of engaging in
conventional air and naval battles, like those fought in the Pacific
during World War II.
So
how would China fight us? If we send some carrier battle groups
to intervene in a war between China and Taiwan, I think China will
do something Kaplan does not mention. She will go nuclear at sea
from the outset.
When
the Cold War ended, we found out that the Soviet Union planned to
do exactly that (so much for Reagan Administration plans to send
our carriers charging up to the Kola Peninsula). The Chinese might
employ nuclear-armed anti-ship missiles and torpedoes, fired from
submarines or surface ships, but I think her little surprise for
us may be nastier. Kaplan briefly mentions that China "may
eventually be able to lob missiles accurately at moving ships in
the Pacific" from deep in Chinese territory. I think those
missiles, ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads, may be ready
now – perhaps with a bit of clandestine targeting assistance from
a Russia whose sphere of influence the United States is aggressively
invading.
The
Chinese way of war is indirect. In most cases, that means China
will engage us with "soft power," as she is already doing
on multiple fronts. But in the case of American intervention in
a Taiwan crisis, what if a Chinese ballistic missile popped a nuke
say, 100 miles from an advancing American carrier battle group?
No one gets hurt, but the message would be loud and clear: keep
coming and you’re toast.
If
we kept coming anyway and the Chinese did nuke a carrier, we would
immediately face an asymmetrical situation. How would we respond?
By nuking a Chinese carrier? China doesn’t have any. If we drop
a nuke on Chinese territory, we have initiated a strategic nuclear
exchange. Is Taiwan worth Seattle or L.A.?
The
right answer, as Kaplan recognizes, is don’t go to war with China.
Perhaps if someone could talk to Karl Rove about the importance
of the Chinese vote . . .
May
19, 2005
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. The views expressed in this article are those
of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity.
Copyright
© 2005 William S. Lind
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