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Stratfor: Chinese Geopolitics and the Significance of Tibet

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  • Stratfor: Chinese Geopolitics and the Significance of Tibet

    Chinese Geopolitics and the Significance of Tibet
    April 15, 2008 | 0055 GMT
    By George Friedman

    China is an island. We do not mean it is surrounded by water; we mean China is surrounded by territory that is difficult to traverse. Therefore, China is hard to invade; given its size and population, it is even harder to occupy. This also makes it hard for the Chinese to invade others; not utterly impossible, but quite difficult. Containing a fifth of the world’s population, China can wall itself off from the world, as it did prior to the United Kingdom’s forced entry in the 19th century and under Mao Zedong. All of this means China is a great power, but one that has to behave very differently than other great powers.

    Analyzing Chinese Geography
    Let’s begin simply by analyzing Chinese geography, looking at two maps. The first represents the physical geography of China.

    The second shows the population density not only of China, but also of the surrounding countries.

    China’s geography is roughly divided into two parts: a mountainous, arid western part and a coastal plain that becomes hilly at its westward end. The overwhelming majority of China’s population is concentrated in that coastal plain. The majority of China’s territory — the area west of this coastal plain — is lightly inhabited, however. This eastern region is the Chinese heartland that must be defended at all cost.

    China as island is surrounded by impassable barriers — barriers that are difficult to pass or areas that essentially are wastelands with minimal population. To the east is the Pacific Ocean. To the north and northwest are the Siberian and Mongolian regions, sparsely populated and difficult to move through. To the south, there are the hills, mountains and jungles that separate China from Southeast Asia; to visualize this terrain, just remember the incredible effort that went into building the Burma Road during World War II. To the southwest lie the Himalayas. In the northwest are Kazakhstan and the vast steppes of Central Asia. Only in the far northeast, with the Russian maritime provinces and the Yalu River separating China from Korea, are there traversable points of contacts. But the balance of military power is heavily in China’s favor at these points.





    (click image to enlarge)
    Strategically, China has two problems, both pivoting around the question of defending the coastal region. First, China must prevent attacks from the sea. This is what the Japanese did in the 1930s, first invading Manchuria in the northeast and then moving south into the heart of China. It is also what the British and other European powers did on a lesser scale in the 19th century. China’s defense against such attacks is size and population. It draws invaders in and then wears them out, with China suffering massive casualties and economic losses in the process.

    The second threat to China comes from powers moving in through the underpopulated portion of the west, establishing bases and moving east, or coming out of the underpopulated regions around China and invading. This is what happened during the Mongol invasion from the northwest. But that invasion was aided by tremendous Chinese disunity, as were the European and Japanese incursions.

    Beijing’s Three Imperatives
    Beijing therefore has three geopolitical imperatives:

    1.Maintain internal unity so that far powers can’t weaken the ability of the central government to defend China.

    2.Maintain a strong coastal defense to prevent an incursion from the Pacific.

    3.Secure China’s periphery by anchoring the country’s frontiers on impassable geographical features; in other words, hold its current borders.

    In short, China’s strategy is to establish an island, defend its frontiers efficiently using its geographical isolation as a force multiplier, and, above all, maintain the power of the central government over the country, preventing regionalism and factionalism.

    We see Beijing struggling to maintain control over China. Its vast security apparatus and interlocking economic system are intended to achieve that. We see Beijing building coastal defenses in the Pacific, including missiles that can reach deep into the Pacific, in the long run trying to force the U.S. Navy on the defensive. And we see Beijing working to retain control over two key regions: Xinjiang and Tibet.

    Xinjiang is Muslim. This means at one point it was invaded by Islamic forces. It also means that it can be invaded and become a highway into the Chinese heartland. Defense of the Chinese heartland therefore begins in Xinjiang. So long as Xinjiang is Chinese, Beijing will enjoy a 1,500-mile, inhospitable buffer between Lanzhou — the westernmost major Chinese city and its oil center — and the border of Kazakhstan. The Chinese thus will hold Xinjiang regardless of Muslim secessionists.

    The Importance of Tibet to China
    Now look at Tibet on the population density and terrain maps. On the terrain map one sees the high mountain passes of the Himalayas. Running from the Hindu Kush on the border with Pakistan to the Myanmar border, small groups can traverse this terrain, but no major army is going to thrust across this border in either direction. Supplying a major force through these mountains is impossible. From a military point of view, it is a solid wall.

    Note that running along the frontier directly south of this border is one of the largest population concentrations in the world. If China were to withdraw from Tibet, and there were no military hindrance to population movement, Beijing fears this population could migrate into Tibet. If there were such a migration, Tibet could turn into an extension of India and, over time, become a potential beachhead for Indian power. If that were to happen, India’s strategic frontier would directly abut Sichuan and Yunnan — the Chinese heartland.

    The Chinese have a fundamental national interest in retaining Tibet, because Tibet is the Chinese anchor in the Himalayas. If that were open, or if Xinjiang became independent, the vast buffers between China and the rest of Eurasia would break down. The Chinese can’t predict the evolution of Indian, Islamic or Russian power in such a circumstance, and they certainly don’t intend to find out. They will hold both of these provinces, particularly Tibet.

    The Chinese note that the Dalai Lama has been in India ever since China invaded Tibet. The Chinese regard him as an Indian puppet. They see the latest unrest in Tibet as instigated by the Indian government, which uses the Dalai Lama to try to destabilize the Chinese hold on Tibet and open the door to Indian expansion. To put it differently, their view is that the Indians could shut the Dalai Lama down if they wanted to, and that they don’t signals Indian complicity.

    It should be added that the Chinese see the American hand behind this as well. Apart from public statements of support, the Americans and Indians have formed a strategic partnership since 2001. The Chinese view the United States — which is primarily focused on the Islamic world — as encouraging India and the Dalai Lama to probe the Chinese, partly to embarrass them over the Olympics and partly to increase the stress on the central government. The central government is stretched in maintaining Chinese security as the Olympics approach. The Chinese are distracted. Beijing also notes the similarities between what is happening in Tibet and the “color” revolutions the United States supported and helped stimulate in the former Soviet Union.

    It is critical to understand that whatever the issues might be to the West, the Chinese see Tibet as a matter of fundamental national security, and they view pro-Tibetan agitation in the West as an attempt to strike at the heart of Chinese national security. The Chinese are therefore trapped. They are staging the Olympics in order to demonstrate Chinese cohesion and progress. But they must hold on to Tibet for national security reasons, and therefore their public relations strategy is collapsing. Neither India nor the United States is particularly upset that the Europeans are thinking about canceling attendance at various ceremonies.

    A Lack of Countermoves
    China has few countermoves to this pressure over Tibet. There is always talk of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. That is not going to happen — not because China doesn’t want to, but because it does not have the naval capability of seizing control of the Taiwan Straits or seizing air superiority, certainly not if the United States doesn’t want it (and we note that the United States has two carrier battle groups in the Taiwan region at the moment). Beijing thus could bombard Taiwan, but not without enormous cost to itself and its own defensive capabilities. It does not have the capability to surge forces across the strait, much less to sustain operations there in anything short of a completely permissive threat environment. The Chinese could fire missiles at Taiwan, but that risks counterstrikes from American missiles. And, of course, Beijing could go nuclear, but that is not likely given the stakes. The most likely Chinese counter here would be trying to isolate Taiwan from shipping by firing missiles. But that again assumes the United States would not respond — something Beijing can’t count on.

    While China thus lacks politico-military options to counter the Tibet pressure, it also lacks economic options. It is highly dependent for its economic well-being on exports to the United States and other countries; drawing money out of U.S. financial markets would require Beijing to put it somewhere else. If the Chinese invested in Europe, European interest rates would go down and U.S. rates would go up, and European money would pour into the United States. The long-held fear of the Chinese withdrawing their money from U.S. markets is therefore illusory: The Chinese are trapped economically. Far more than the United States, they can’t afford a confrontation.

    That leaves the pressure on Tibet, and China struggling to contain it. Note that Beijing’s first imperative is to maintain China’s internal coherence. China’s great danger is always a weakening of the central government and the development of regionalism. Beijing is far from losing control, but recently we have observed a set of interesting breakdowns. The inability to control events in Tibet is one. Significant shortages of diesel fuel is a second. Shortages of rice and other grains is a third. These are small things, but they are things that should not be happening in a country as well-heeled in terms of cash as China is, and as accustomed as it is to managing security threats.

    China must hold Tibet, and it will. The really interesting question is whether the stresses building up on China’s central administration are beginning to degrade its ability to control and manage events. It is easy to understand China’s obsession with Tibet. The next step is to watch China trying to pick up the pieces on a series of administrative miscues. That will give us a sense of the state of Chinese affairs.


    See here for the maps.

    Chinese Geopolitics and the Significance of Tibet | Stratfor

    I think this is a pretty insightful article, but I'm posting it here to see what you people think of it.

  • #2
    Originally posted by Transient View Post
    I think this is a pretty insightful article, but I'm posting it here to see what you people think of it.
    Personally I did not find it so insightful at all, as most of it is a condensed rehash of opinions floated out about China periodically since at least the 1870s. The most disturbing part of the analysis is this:

    "In short, China’s strategy is to establish an island, defend its frontiers efficiently using its geographical isolation as a force multiplier, and, above all, maintain the power of the central government over the country, preventing regionalism and factionalism."

    China has had a taste of an outside world much bigger than it had imagined before. The outside world, which too consisted previously of many other introverted and self-contained "islands", has also gotten a taste of China. It is extremely naiive to think that both will somehow forget the taste - the sweet and the bitter taste - and somehow retreat across the convenient lines that the author draws for China.

    Comment


    • #3
      That person also forgot to make mention of the natural resources in Tibet and Xinjiang. No Chinese government would ever let go of such reserves.

      Comment


      • #4
        I've a question:

        Do terrains (other than impossible barriers such as the Himilayas) even matter in modern warfare, especially with things such as airplanes flying around?

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Xiaohaha View Post
          I've a question:

          Do terrains (other than impossible barriers such as the Himilayas) even matter in modern warfare, especially with things such as airplanes flying around?
          To answer a question with a question: What is the ultimate objective of the war you are asking about? Simple, generalized answer: In some cases it still matters, in other cases it does not.

          Comment


          • #6
            Ridiculous article.

            The entirity of North China is tank country, and there is no geographical barrier preventing entry from Siberia. From the west, deserts don't block modern armies. If they did, how did Iran and Iraq go to war?

            Comment


            • #7
              The article gives a very broad overview of the issue. Very broad indeed.

              It does not really give the significance of holding on to Tibet with great insight either. Technically, East Turkistan (Xingjian) is more important that Tibet.

              Given the pan Islamic fervour and the tenacity of Islamic fundamentalists, Dalai Lama and his Buddhists are nowhere in their league and notwithstanding what the author grandstands about India’s involvement, India is in no mood for confrontation or in a position to do so, with or without the claimed US goading. The very fact, India is handling the Tawang and the NEFA issue in a gingerly manner as also making India a police state to protect the impotent Olympic Flame is a clear indicator of India’s sensitiveness to confront China. Therefore, the author is wrong to insinuate that India is a US surrogate in this game to unnerve China. Add to this, the Dalai Lama was sent on a religious trip to the US before the Olympic Flame hit the Indian soil in the wee hours of the night!!

              The Himalayas is indeed a barrier, notwithstanding 1962, where the Chinese poured in through an unguarded border where there were only small outposts of the SIB which were few and far between. The fact that the Chinese used guerilla tactics in NEFA instead of the classical combat techniques would indicate that the wherewithal of modern battle like artillery and logistic follow up is not feasible given the Passes and the lack of roads.

              The terrain towards Ladakh and Urumchi is a different kettle of fish and is tankable and flat, though boulder strewn (I have not given the terrain a detailed look and so prima facie, it appears so). Therefore, movement of battle groups in Xingjian and Western Tibet is feasible and this makes the western front more vulnerable than South Tibet. And if the Islamic fundamentalist factor is thrown in to churn the murky waters, it is a serious headache for the Chinese.

              It is however, an incorrect premise to feel that deserts make excellent battlefields. The adage goes that deserts are a tactician’s delight and a logistician’s nightmare! Water and logistic backup have to be on wheels and the desert sand makes equipment very prone to a tight maintenance regimen. Therefore, wide sweeps and pincers have their value but that much and no more!

              Notwithstanding the view that the air forces can win war, the fact that unless territory is under one’s jurisdiction, no result is noticeable, is by itself an indictor that while the air force plays a major role, yet it is the land forces that decide the outcome.

              Just a very generalised thought as generalised as the article!


              "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

              I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

              HAKUNA MATATA

              Comment


              • #8
                Thanks for the replies, whatever they have been. It was insightful to me, so that shows how little I know, I guess. :) Whatever the case, the comments on the article gave me an even better understanding. So thanks.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Transient View Post
                  Thanks for the replies, whatever they have been. It was insightful to me, so that shows how little I know, I guess. :) Whatever the case, the comments on the article gave me an even better understanding. So thanks.
                  No, I think it was very observant of you to have posted this article.

                  It got us thinking and each post here is a learning.

                  I commend you for posting an interesting article that would lead to some very interesting debate.

                  Congratulations and well done and thank you!!


                  "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

                  I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

                  HAKUNA MATATA

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I don't think China want to be an island, isolated from the rest of world. Talking about defence, the author's mind was really outdated. Is there a county on the world wants to invade China ? I don't think so.
                    China's problem is it don't have a blue water navy to protect its trade and foreign interests.
                    Last edited by xunil; 21 Apr 08,, 19:20.

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