Is China's air defense zone a game changer?
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| Beijing
China has ruffled a lot of international feathers with its weekend declaration of an 鈥渁ir defense identification zone鈥 over airspace already claimed by Japan. Now the question is whether Beijing will aggressively enforce its self-declared rights 鈥 and whether they are capable of doing so.
The United States, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan have all rejected, condemned or regretted Beijing鈥檚 announcement聽Saturday聽that all foreign aircraft must file flight plans before entering its newly declared zone, which includes Japanese-administered聽islands that China also claims.
Japan has said it will ignore the Chinese demand, which Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida called a 鈥渙ne sided action鈥 that 鈥渃annot be allowed.鈥 That heightened fears of a military clash in the contested area.聽
鈥淚rrational actions in the ADIZ [air defense identification zone] could lead to conflict,鈥 says Wang Jinling, a former Chinese military officer who now heads San Lue, an independent think tank on security affairs in Beijing. 鈥淩eal clashes are possible.鈥澛
But a clash isn't likely, he adds. 鈥淐hina鈥檚 intention is not to show its military strength or to spark a conflict, but to underline its sovereignty鈥 over the disputed islands, known as the Diaoyu in China and the Senkaku in Japan.
That is a view shared by a senior Japanese military analyst, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue. 鈥淏oth sides want to avoid an incident around the Senkakus,鈥 he says. 鈥淏oth militaries have been very, very careful about not going into each others鈥 air or sea space鈥 since the dispute broke out in September last year, deploying civilian proxies such as Coast Guard vessels instead, he points out.
But with both sides claiming the right to monitor aircraft in an overlapping zone, and to scramble fighters to deal with unidentified craft, accidents are more likely. US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel warned聽Saturday聽that China鈥檚 declaration of an ADIZ 鈥渋ncreases the risk of misunderstanding and miscalculations.鈥
Chinese radar capabilities questioned
Such risks may be heightened, Japanese and other military experts say, because the Chinese military does not appear to have sufficiently sophisticated radar capability to track fighter planes flying at low altitudes over the disputed islands, which are more than 200 miles from the Chinese coast.
Beijing explained its declaration of an air defense identification zone, similar to zones declared by the US, Japan, and a number of other states, as designed 鈥渢o defend national sovereignty and territorial and air security,鈥 according to a statement on the Defense Ministry website.
If foreign aircraft in the zone refuse to identify themselves or to follow Chinese instructions, 鈥淐hina鈥檚 armed forces will adopt defensive emergency measures to respond,鈥 Beijing鈥檚 statement said.聽
鈥淭his is a reminder to Japan that [China is] serious and prepared to hold to their position indefinitely until they get a concession,鈥 says Denny Roy, an analyst at the East-West Center in Honolulu. 鈥淭hey want Japan to acknowledge there is a territorial dispute鈥 and are taking steps towards聽de facto聽co-administering the islands.
The Japanese government, however, is showing no signs of being prepared to accept the existence of a dispute. Officials in Tokyo increasingly view Chinese pressure as a test of their determination; should they cede on the Senkakus, they fear, China will then press on other issues.
Nor will Japanese pilots obey Chinese demands for identification, the Japanese military analyst says. 鈥淭hat is unacceptable. It would sound as if we admit their claim鈥 to the disputed territory, he points out.
China won no international sympathy for its move. US Secretary of State John Kerry said Washington was 鈥渄eeply concerned鈥 by what he called 鈥渁n attempt to change the status quo in the East China Sea.鈥 South Korea said the Chinese announcement was 鈥渞egrettable,鈥 not least because China鈥檚 new ADIZ overlaps with Seoul鈥檚 zone, and Taiwan, which also claims the Diaoyu islands, urged Beijing not to use military means to resolve its territorial dispute.
Island purchase stirs dispute
Tensions between China and Japan, the second and third largest economies in the world, have worsened since the Japanese government bought three of the disputed islands in 2012 from their private Japanese owner, saying it wanted to keep them out of the hands of a nationalist firebrand who could them to provoke Beijing.
China, however, saw the move as a violation of a longstanding informal agreement to leave the territorial dispute in abeyance pending a possible agreement to jointly exploit any resources, such as oil and gas, which may be discovered in the islands鈥 vicinity.
Beijing formalized its claim to the islands and surrounding ocean last year, publishing territorial baselines, and has since dispatched Coast Guard ships and other civilian vessels into or near Japanese waters on an almost daily basis. Japanese F-15 jets have scrambled about 300 times since the crisis erupted 14 months ago to deter potential intruders.
Only very rarely, however, has China deployed military vessels or aircraft in a threatening fashion. If Beijing wanted to ratchet up the pressure, suggests Dr. Roy, it could step up the frequency of its air and sea patrols around the islands, 鈥渙r swap in navy ships for the maritime patrol ships they have been using.鈥
That, he says, 鈥渨ould mark a big escalation鈥 in the dispute.
With tensions between the two neighbors rising, says Mr. Wang, 鈥渘ow is not the moment for their militaries to compete in strength, but for their leaders to compete in wisdom.鈥澛