- By Michael Lettieri
- Council On Hemispheric Affairs
President Bush’s upcoming trip to China underscores
Washington’s vital interest in comprehending that emerging eastern
power, particularly the growth in the numbers and equipment of its
People’s Liberation Army (PLA). In the past 15 years, the People’s
Republic of China (PRC) has slowly assumed an increasingly prominent
role in world affairs and now has begun to effectively extend its reach
into most corners of the Western Hemisphere. This expansion has
undoubtedly attracted the anxious eyes of some U.S. policymakers who may
perhaps worry that the traditional “backyard” is being romanced away by
Beijing, notwithstanding the reality that Washington seems to have
incorporated much of Asia into its sphere of influence.
Indeed the PRC has powerful motivations for such courtships: as China
has industrialized its strategic ties to Latin America have grown.
Demonstrably, the region has assumed an increasing importance as a
source for vital agricultural and mineral resources. Beijing
aggressively seeks growth and expansion, and despite the altruistic and
fraternal tones taken in its trade agreements, it is far from an
eleemosynary gesture. Since it is possible that China’s neocolonial
investment strategy could result in crises similar to those which
traditionally have involved comparable U.S. interests in the past, it is
possible that China could also emulate Washington’s provocative
practices to protect its newfound engagements.
As Beijing moves through the early stages of establishing close working
arrangements with Latin American militaries, China is perhaps readying
itself to ensure that its economic and strategic interests are being
safeguarded in the event that regional developments threaten the
significant funds it is now beginning to invest in such countries as
Mexico, Cuba, Venezuela, Brazil and Argentina. In examining these ties,
it helps to recall earlier U.S. strategies that led to various
categories of intervention in such countries as Cuba, Chile, El
Salvador, Nicaragua and Panama, where an important military factor
eventually came into play. This is not to say that China will
necessarily exactly emulate past U.S. behavior, but that it may
unwittingly find itself heading down that road.
China’s Grand Ambitions
Before assessing Latin America’s relationship with China, it is crucial
to first examine the framework of Beijing’s operating style in order to
understand how the region fits into those plans. China’s growth into a
global power was propelled by conscious and aggressive government
policies that sought to diffuse the country’s influence around the
world. According to the 2004 Congressional Annual Report on the Military
Power of the People’s Republic of China, “China’s aspirations and
efforts to achieve great power status have accelerated in recent years,”
and PRC party officials have declared the following goals: “double the
2000 gross national product by 2010 [and] further develop the structure
of the national economy by 2020…” In order to achieve these desiderata,
the report noted, China has adapted a foreign policy strategy “for the
developing world [that] seeks to expand the scope and depth of its
relationships, primarily as a means to secure access to natural
resources and markets.” In this sense, Chinese ventures in the Western
Hemisphere are to be paralleled by the continual expansion of PRC
interests in Central Asia and Africa, among other regions, and are being
driven by a clear national vision of economic growth. Thus, to guarantee
future economic expansion, Beijing must establish secure sources for
important raw materials to fuel its now spiking industrial development.
Economic growth, however, is simply one component of Beijing’s larger
strategy to increase the country’s “comprehensive national power” (CNP),
a concept that calibrates national strength as the combination of
numerous measures. The idea was loosely described by analyst Michael
Pillsbury in 2000, as considering “a variety of factors, such as
territory, natural resources, military force, economic power, social
conditions, domestic government, foreign policy, and international
influence. CNP is the aggregate of all these factors.” To that end, the
(U.S.) 2004 Report to Congress on PRC Military Power noted that,
“Ensuring domestic stability and a secure international environment is
crucial to Beijing’s national development strategy.”
The PRC also views the Taiwan issue as highly important to its CNP, and
in its quest to delegitimize the island’s self-proclaimed independent
government, Latin America holds particular importance. Of the 26
countries that still recognize Taiwan as a free-standing nation, half
are found in Latin America or the Caribbean. The PRC’s aggressive aid
and investment packages have successfully influenced some countries to
switch their allegiances. The Congressional Research Report on China’s
involvement in Latin America noted that “…in 2004, Dominica severed
relations with Taiwan after Beijing trumped Taiwan’s $9 million in
assistance with a pledge of $122 million in assistance to the tiny
country over six years.”
Latin America’s Strategic Importance to China
As China’s economy has boomed, racking up continuous growth rates of 9%,
and its population has become increasingly urbanized, the country’s need
for raw materials has skyrocketed. The need was exacerbated by the
decision to become a fully motorized consumer economy, meaning that in
short order China would require in the order of twice of its present
level of consumption of petroleum. It is relevant to note that today
China is the third largest manufacturer of automobiles in the world.
Therefore, it is not surprising that according to the Washington Post,
Beijing has estimated that by 2020 the country would need 600 million
tons of crude oil annually. Furthermore, it is noteworthy that in a
report in February’s issue of Poder magazine, “China has
displaced the United States as the world’s largest consumer of most
industrial raw materials, including copper, aluminum, nickel, platinum,
and iron ore.”
An Embarrassment of Riches
Latin America offers in abundance many of those key resources now
coveted by China, and its history and experience of serving as a
raw-goods-exporting economic enclave for the industrialized metropolis –
be it Spain, the U.K. or the U.S., has been at different stages of its
history – further enhances the region’s appeal to Beijing. In its
eagerness to secure access to the Latin American resources it so prizes,
the PRC has skillfully wielded its economic “soft power” to convince
regional governments to amicably open up their countries to Chinese
penetrations. Not that much persuasion was necessary, considering the
desire of countries like Brazil to find an outside foreign partner
capable of counterbalancing the U.S.
China has thus been able to invest heavily in the region in a remarkably
short period of time. According to a Congressional Research Report by
Kerry Dumbaugh and Mark P. Sullivan, Chinese private sector direct
investment in the region is significant: at $1.04 billion it constitutes
more than a third of China’s overall direct investment worldwide.
Furthermore, the PRC has approximately $1 billion in investments in
Venezuelan oil production, and has promised much more to other countries
in the region. In 2004, China pledged $275 million for improvements to
Argentina’s infrastructure, and, according to Poder magazine, it
also offered Brazil “$8 billion for railways, $6 billion for low cost
housing, $5 billion for hydrocarbons, $450 billion for communications,
and $260 billion for satellites.” While few of those promises have yet
to begun to be met, their nature is not widely different from, say,
infrastructural programs carried out in early 20th century Cuba by the
post-independence American occupying administration, or by the
Kennedy-era Alliance for Progress. Such projects were designed to
primarily further U.S. economic aims by improving the investment
environment in a given regional country, while simultaneously
cultivating the appearance of being a good neighbor.
While its investments have been noticeably generous, China’s eagerness
to pump money into some regional projects does not necessarily represent
an unmitigated good. It is, perhaps, simply more of the same for Latin
America. While positive changes may result from the new and brimming
Sino-Latin American economic engagement, such investments do not
necessarily adequately address or change underlying problems of social
injustice, unequal income distribution, crippling unemployment or
macroeconomic dependency, and must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis
to determine whether they are entirely kosher.
Rhetoric aside, Chinese planners assuredly do not concern themselves
with such matters. As Beijing almost myopically pursues its economic and
political goals, it runs the risk of inadvertently irritating the
countries which it already tries to utilize for such ends. Already,
questions are being raised locally about both the social displacement
and environmental destruction being caused by commercial soy bean
cultivation in Paraguay and Brazil – production fueled by China’s
relentless demand for the product. Elsewhere, Peruvian workers at the
Chinese-owned Shougang Hierro mine launched a two day strike this summer
over poor working conditions and low wages. Such examples underscore the
concerns that can be raised about the consequential influence of Chinese
investment on the decision-making process in each country in which it is
present. If China continues to stress commodity extraction at nearly any
cost, in terms of environmental considerations or the sentiments of the
local population – it could engender new internal conflicts which may
echo those faced by other metropole powers in the recent past.
Strategic Defense Through Beijing’s Eyes
Beijing places tremendous strategic value on economic resources. The
exigency of maintaining access to petroleum and other industrial
materials that are essential to its continued growth has led the PRC to
seriously commit itself to ensuring that the pipelines – physical and
metaphorical – remain open. Indeed, Beijing’s interests have now started
to actually converge with Washington’s in one key area: political
stability and the protection of investment. In spite of the fraternal
tone taken in Beijing’s communiqués, one must assume that its root
interest is economic, and interpret Chinese military diplomacy in the
region through this lens.
For Washington, that is hardly new. Defense of economic interests has
always been a potent motivating factor in its Latin American policy and
frequently has spurred military activism – as evidenced by regime
changes or decisions to prop up endangered governments in Grenada,
Nicaragua, El Salvador and Panama, among a number of others in recent
years. China could conceivably find itself involved in the same scenario
as a possible result of its resource-driven economic strategy.
The 2004 Defense White Paper published by the Chinese government in
conjunction with the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), notes that “China’s
basic goals and tasks in maintaining national security are… [among
others] to safeguard the interests of national development, promote
economic and social development…and [to] steadily increase the overall
national strength.” But according to the 2004 congressional report, the
non-bellicose language of the Chinese White Paper “should not cloak the
ambitious nature of China’s national development program.” The U.S.
report went on to note that Beijing broadly perceives threats to its
national security, and hostile acts against the country’s foreign
investment or economic interests abroad would certainly qualify as such.
Towards this end, Chinese economic linkages with Latin America have been
paralleled by a certain growth in the military relationship between the
two geographical areas.
Hand in Hand
The meteoric deterioration of the quality of U.S. regional engagement
during the Otto Reich-Roger Noriega era of ideological supremacy, helped
open the door for opportunistic PRC probes throughout the hemisphere. As
it advanced its economic aims in Latin America, it also has carefully
established active, if low intensity, military relations with the
region’s armed forces. Such actions are in line with Beijing’s foreign
military policy elsewhere in the world, where the country is pursuing
primarily economic interests. The 2004 Congressional Report observed
that “in support of these goals, [expanding political influence and
economic access] China’s global military engagement plays an
important…role gaining access and influence with host country
governments.” Such military connections also have been accelerated by
counter-productive U.S. foreign policy initiatives, specifically, the
American Service-members Protection Act, which has effectively served to
sever ties between the U.S. and many Latin American armed forces.
The growth in ties between regional militaries and the PLA is not unique
to Latin America however. Military diplomacy, as such initiatives are
described, comprises a significant part of the PLA’s operations each
year, and, while technically autonomous, does seem to correlate with
Beijing’s larger economic and political strategies throughout the globe.
China’s 2004 Defense White Paper observed that the PLA carries out
military cooperation “in line with the national foreign policy.” Such
initiatives include high level visits with counterparts, joint
exercises, training, technological exchanges, and a variety of academic
exchanges. This template certainly seems to be playing out with vigor in
the Western Hemisphere.
Although China has had only one established direct instance of military
linkage with the region as a result of sending 125 riot police to
participate in the U.N.’s Haiti peacekeeping force, such an action seems
to be indicative of a larger strategy in the future. A 2005 report by R.
Evan Ellis of the Strategic Studies Institute (SSI) commented that the
involvement could “…be interpreted as part of a more long-term strategy
through which China is pursuing a greater diplomatic presence in the
region, and an expanded voice in its politics.” This analysis rings
true: however negative the popular perception of the U.S.-sponsored
manipulation of Haitian developments has been in Latin America, it is
impossible to view the PLA’s presence there as anything other than a
well-considered step towards establishing the precedent for future
military engagements in a region that Beijing increasingly sees as
strategically important.
A Multifaceted Relationship
While certain aspects of the Chinese-Latin American military
relationship remain unconsummated (there have been no major sales of
equipment, and there is only a scattered presence of Chinese troops on
the ground), China assiduously has promoted military ties in the key
areas of cooperation and exchange. Through still relatively small-scale
military exchange programs carried out between regional armed forces’
establishments and individually-tasked PLA officers, a modest bond has
started to develop.
Strengthened by cooperation agreements such as those signed between
China, Brazil and Venezuela, bilateral military ties are increasing,
although they remain minimal. The relationship’s growth has been
facilitated by generic cooperation agreements that are typically linked
with increased economic ties and are well received by Latin American
leaders as one of the many benefits stemming from China’s now swelling
engagement in the region. On a 2004 visit to China, Brazilian president
Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva sought an “across the board” consolidation
of strategic relations including trade, scientific, cultural and
military ties, according to the China Daily newspaper.
Such interest has been reciprocated by the Chinese military, which
itself has also placed increased emphasis on ties with Latin America.
Between 2003 and 2004, according to the PLA website, there were 15
visits to Latin American countries by PLA officials that were described
as “major military exchanges.” This was a fairly notable increase over
the nine visits paid to the region from 2001-2002. The pace of
integration has not slowed since 2004, as Chinese President Hu Jintao’s
December tour tightened Beijing’s relationship with the region. So far
this year, a military delegation has visited Chile and Colombia in
September, the director of the PLA’s General Political Department has
traveled to Venezuela and Argentina, and “goodwill visits” were made to
Cuba and Mexico. For example, in assessing the significance of China’s
military diplomacy with Argentina, the PLA’s deputy chief of staff Zhang
Li noted at an August 29 press conference in Beijing that, “the ties
between the two militaries are an important part of the bilateral
relations of the two countries…”
An Elaborate Courtship
In the case of Brazil, Chinese Vice President Zeng Qinghong said in 2003
that “China and Brazil, as two friendly countries, carried out extensive
cooperation in such fields as politics, trade, culture and military.” He
went on to add that “The friendly cooperation between the two countries
benefited not only the two peoples but also the regional and world peace
and development.” A PLA release quotes its chief of general staff as
observing that “…with the development of the Sino-Brazilian relations,
the contacts between the two armed forces were increasing, the military
forces had carried out friendly exchanges and cooperation in multi-field
[sic] and multi-level [sic]. For many years, the high-level visits
between the two armed forces were steadily more frequent, which promoted
the development of the relations between the two armed forces and
maintained a positive approach toward promoting the bilateral friendly
and cooperative ties.” According to a Henry L. Stimson Center report,
since the mid 1990s the Chinese National Defense University has hosted a
number of Brazilian students for two to three month terms, a program
that has likely grown since then, as the two countries move towards
tighter integration in various non-military fields.
“Cooperative ties” have taken many forms, but the sentiment behind them
is the same. Chile has also established a close relationship which,
according to Ellis’ report, includes “attendance by Chilean officers at
the National Defense University of China,” and “Chinese representation
at the Chilean War College.” This spring, select officers at the Chilean
War College began studying Mandarin Chinese under the tutelage of
Captains Sun Xintang and Zao Xitao. According to the Chilean Army’s
website, the chief objective of the course is not just “to provide
linguistic knowledge,” but to educate the officers on “cultural aspects
of China; fundamental speaking and writing skills; grammar and
comprehension necessary to achieve fluid communication.”
Venezuela and China also have tightened their military bonds in recent
years. In August of 2005, Caracas purchased three military grade radar
systems from Beijing. The radars, and the included command center, were
designed to significantly enhance Venezuela’s ability to manage its
airspace. These overtures have their roots in the major exchanges that
have occurred between the two countries (seven from 2000 to 2005), as
well as a recent sale of uniforms to the Venezuelan military. A 2002
agreement establishing a system of academic cooperation between the two
countries’ defense academies, indicates a further level of bilateral
engagement. As relations between Venezuela and the U.S. have soured,
China seems to have taken advantage, and Beijing could be close to
establishing a potential master source to satisfy its oil thirst.
Peru and China also maintain active military exchanges, which according
to the Peruvian Defense Ministry, are targeted primarily at scientific
and technological cooperation. A 1998 agreement sent $1 million in
military assistance from China to Peru, and similar accords have since
followed. In December of 2002, China signed a military aid agreement
with Peru that resulted in the transfer to Lima of $740,000 worth of
military supplies, namely buses and ambulances. A December 2004 deal
formalized that relationship and extended it through 2009, assuring that
Peru will annually receive 6 million Yuan (approximately $740,000) worth
of military equipment from across the Pacific.
A New School?
According to remarks made by U.S. Southern Command chief General Bantz
J. Craddock at a March conference in Florida, there are growing contacts
between Chinese and Latin American militaries, and that units from the
region are increasingly training and spending time in the PRC. At a
Senate subcommittee meeting, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State for Western Hemispheric Affairs Charles Shapiro commented that the
State Department was “watching closely increased [military] educational
exchanges between China and several Latin American and Caribbean
countries…” A State Department source suggested that while military
contacts between the regions were currently “modest,” there were
nevertheless “a number of [military] students going to school in China.”
According to the source, China seemed most interested in countries with
which it has closer economic ties and trade relationships, and that the
greatest number of exchanges seemed to be with countries that were more
“strategically advanced,” namely Brazil, Argentina and Chile.
An Uncertain Future
It seems clear that the PRC and the PLA have undertaken military
diplomacy as part of a coherent effort to gain greater engagement with
Latin America. This new military engagement on the part of Beijing
clearly does not pose an overt threat to U.S. security. Such sorties
largely have been limited to exchanges, and have not contained major
arms deal components, and do not suggest a systematic Chinese attempt to
penetrate the hemisphere. Nor can they be seen as an attempt to
undermine regional stability or directly confront the U.S., despite
Representative Katherine Harris (R-FL) jejune remark that Chinese
engagement “constitutes a threat to the relatively young democracies
throughout the region, which in turn jeopardizes our vital strategic
partnerships throughout the hemisphere.”
According to the Turkish Weekly News, at the recent Senate
hearings, Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary for Western Hemisphere
Affairs, Roger Pardo-Maurer recognized this, noting that there is
nothing to suggest that “Chinese military activities in the Western
Hemisphere, including arms sales, pose a direct conventional threat to
the United States or its allies.” Furthermore, China and the U.S.
clearly have different security relationships with Latin America –
differences defined by geographic and social realities: drugs and
immigration questions obviously do not affect China with the magnitude
that they do the U.S., and the nature and the modest scale of the PLA’s
involvement reflects that.
Chinese Protection of Investment: A Threat to
Whom?
R. Evan Ellis notes that “China’s interest in securing access to the
resources …through trade and investment give it a vested interest in the
stability of the region,” but stability has often been a fleeting
quality in Latin America, and the growing Chinese economic interests
could, paradoxically, lead to internal conflict. Because China seems to
be, perhaps unwittingly, following a neocolonial path similar to (but
not a pure mimic of) that taken by the U.S., it will likely begin to
face similar challenges. Ellis rightly concludes that Beijing will
undoubtedly be forced to eventually confront any threats to its growing
investment, whether from an unfriendly government or a subnational
movement. While China traditionally has backed some insurgencies with
which it shared ideological affinities, this era may have passed. To a
Paraguayan farmer displaced by the expansion of a Chinese soy farm, or
to the Peruvian miners unhappy over their living conditions, it little
matters the color of the flag at corporate headquarters. Beijing may
ultimately be forced to confront regional backlashes to its investment,
just as those with which other colonizers were eventually forced to
respond.
To this end, Chinese military involvement in the region can be
interpreted not as the threat to U.S. security that some right-wing
analysts are noisily perceiving, but should be simply understood as
merely another component of Beijing’s economic program – albeit one that
perhaps raises the specter of neocolonial intervention and an improbable
potential subversion of Latin American sovereignty. All this may amount
to nothing more than hypothetical questions regarding purported
misgivings over some possible strong-arming of local elites by China.
More likely – however remote the odds – it would be more logical to
assume that in any clash of interest, Beijing will align with the
government rather than dissident groups.
Nevertheless, the implications of such postulations are strong. China
could eventually need to protect its investment, and in doing so, may be
forced to resort to its regional military contacts, a concern which is
amplified by the way in which China has paralleled its economic
engagement with military diplomacy. The 2004 Congressional Report
suggested that “from Beijing’s perspective, strategic ambiguity
[regarding its policies and motives] – including strategic denial and
deception – is a mechanism to influence the policies of foreign
governments and the opinions of the general public and elites in other
countries.” R. Evan Ellis has hinted that, in spite of its proclaimed
non-intervention doctrine, the PRC would have no moral qualms about
actively manipulating politics and opinion in a given Latin American
country such as Colombia, Peru or Chile as a means of guaranteeing that
their economic concerns are protected. In this schema of neocolonial
strategy, military ties could prove to be a valuable, if an adjunct
tool.
Marching in Step with History?
U.S. links to Latin American militaries have long been condemned by
groups that rightly feel that such relationships could pose a threat to
authentic sovereignty. Military diplomacy does indeed promote
“understanding,” but it may go beyond simply broadening the worldview of
each nation’s uniformed services. Exchanges among the regional armed
forces promote an understanding of the investing nation’s economic and
political motivations, as well as, more perniciously, perhaps
engendering a capability to play to those interests for personal or
professional gain. History has demonstrated that the potential for
compromising sovereignty exists through both indirect and direct
channels. First, if officers are exposed to overly politicized
indoctrination (i.e. the School of the Americas) they may be more
inclined to act on their own or some extra-regional initiative if they
perceive an opportunity to profit by courting favor with an influential
investing nation. Secondly, closer military links facilitate the support
and acceptance by military coup governments and may encourage a
metropolis to push for armed action if its interests are threatened. In
the event that future developments force the PRC to defend China’s
economic interests, it may have recourse in the military, making the
relationship (currently meticulously being established) between the PLA
and regional militaries an invaluable strategic asset.
As China’s investment in Latin America continues to grow, it will
necessarily emphasize regional stability and the protection of its
investments. In doing so, it may find itself in the position, unlikely
enough, of having to flex its muscles to achieve an economic end. The
vehicle for such influence may well have a military aspect to it, and
sadly such a tactic could rely upon a great deal of precedence in Latin
America.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research
Associate Michael Lettieri.
November 14, 2005
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For More Info:
China Debates the Future Security Environment
Michael Pillsbury
January 2000
National Defense University Press
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/china/doctrine/pills2/
- China's National Defense in 2004 (Defense White Paper)
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/china/doctrine/natdef2004.html
- U.S. National Security Implications of Chinese Involvement in
Latin America
R.Evan Ellis
http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB606.pdf
- FY 2004 Report to Congress on PRC Military Power
http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/d20040528PRC.pdf
- China’s Growing Interest in Latin America (CRS Report for
Congress)
Kerry Dumbaugh, Mark P. Sullivan
http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/45464.pdf
- China’s Foreign Military Relations (Henry L. Stimson Center
Report)
Kenneth W. Allen, Eric A. McVadon
http://www.stimson.org/china/pdf/chinmil.pdf
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