Deterrence key to
curbing China, report says
SHIFTING: The report by RAND Corp said a US
direct defense of Taiwan against China was already a challenge and would become
harder as Beijing¡¦s capabilities increased
By J. Michael Cole / Staff Reporter
Armed conflict between the US and China during the next 20 years is improbable,
provided Washington retains the capacity to deter behavior that would lead to
such a clash, a US think tank says in a new report.
In an occasional paper titled Conflict with China: Prospects, Consequences and
Strategies for Deterrence prepared by RAND Corp for the US Army, the authors say
China¡¦s security interests and military capabilities for the next two decades
are expected to remain focused on its immediate periphery, with conflict
likeliest to occur over Taiwan, the Korean Peninsula, one or more countries in
Southeast Asia or India.
¡§China is seeking neither territorial aggrandizement nor ideological sway over
its neighbors,¡¨ the report says. ¡§It shows no interest in matching US military
expenditures, achieving a comparable global reach or assuming defense
commitments beyond its immediate periphery.¡¨
While such intentions could change, the US would probably receive considerable
warning of such a shift, given the lead time needed to develop the capabilities
needed for a new strategy that would seek to alter China¡¦s current emphasis on
regional contingencies.
¡§While China¡¦s overall military capabilities will not equal those of the United
States anytime soon, it will more quickly achieve local superiority in its
immediate neighborhood, first in and around Taiwan and then at somewhat greater
distances,¡¨ the paper says. ¡§In consequence, the direct defense of contested
assets in that region will become progressively more difficult, eventually
approaching impossible.¡¨
Given this, the US will become increasingly dependent on ¡§escalatory options for
defense and retaliatory capabilities for deterrence,¡¨ it says.
¡§Conventional strikes on mainland Chinese military targets may be the best
escalatory option, but there is little reason to be confident that conflict
could be so confined,¡¨ the authors say.
Regarding Taiwan, the authors say while relations between Beijing and Taipei
have improved, ¡§no meaningful progress has been made on the key issue between
the two states, which is if, when, and how the island¡¦s ultimate status ¡X as an
independent polity or as part of a ¡¥reunified¡¦ China ¡X will be determined.¡¨
¡§The chance of conflict across the Taiwan Strait will remain so long as this
fundamental disagreement persists,¡¨ they write.
Core missions for the US, it says, would include ¡§preventing China from gaining
air and sea dominance, and limiting the impact of Beijing¡¦s land-attack
missiles¡¨ through ¡§flexible combinations of active and passive defense and
offensive action.¡¨
Those include the possibility of US strikes against targets in China associated
with the offensive against Taiwan.
¡§As China¡¦s military modernization progresses, the US ability to confidently
accomplish these missions is eroding,¡¨ it says. ¡§Absent an unlikely reversal in
the ongoing rebalancing of military power in the area ... a direct defense of
Taiwan has already become a challenge and is likely to become increasingly
difficult in coming years.¡¨
The best option for planners in Washington to reduce the risk of escalation
before a conflict turned hot is to ¡§enable the [military] capabilities¡¨ and
buttress the resolve of China¡¦s neighbors in a way that does not signal to
Beijing that Washington is attempting to encircle China.
A parallel effort should be made to draw China into cooperative security
endeavors, it says.
In the end, the economic consequences of a Sino-American conflict could be
historically unparalleled, even if both sides avoid economic warfare, they
write, adding that this acts as ¡§a powerful mutual deterrent, one marginally in
the American favor at present.¡¨
¡§Strengthening the US economy is the best way of ensuring that the balance of
interdependence and of the associated deterrence does not shift dangerously
against the United States over the next several decades,¡¨ the paper says.
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