Japan Data

Senkaku Power Game: An Overview of the Japan-China Islands Dispute

Politics

In September 2012, Japan’s nationalization of the Senkaku Islands brought a flare-up to a simmering dispute with China over who owns the territory. As a result, the November 2014 bilateral summit in Beijing was the first between the countries’ leaders for over two years. This article summarizes the complex history of the islands and the dispute and explores the larger issues of sea power in the region.

A Larger Power Game

The military concept of “sea power” is the most fitting and widely known explanation for how nations establish control over the uninhabited expanses of the sea. US naval strategist Alfred Thayer Mahan (1840–1914) believed that national power in the modern era is dependent on trade, and that ensuring the security of merchant fleets and trade vessels is the key to a country’s destiny. Naval power is for that purpose, and the area in which a country can exert this power when necessary is its sphere of influence and defense zone.

This strategic target of establishing sea power had a major impact around the world in the twentieth century. Mahan gave direct counsel to Japanese combined fleet staff officer Akiyama Saneyuki (1868–1918), and his ideas heavily influenced Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany (1859–1941) and Sergey Gorshkov (1910–1988), who built the Soviet Union’s postwar navy. Liu Huaqing (1916–2011), who was long a central figure in China’s navy and an aide to Deng Xiaoping, was also known to be a follower of Mahan’s theories. In the 1980s, following the conclusion of the Treaty of Peace and Friendship Between Japan and the People's Republic of China and the start of reforms and the opening up of China, Liu set forth the First Island Chain strategy of establishing defensive lines behind which the Chinese navy would have total control and insisted on the need for the navy to have aircraft carriers.

However, even this did not make waves in the East China Sea. From the perspective of sea power, in the postwar era the Senkaku Islands and the East China Sea belonged to neither Japan nor China. Instead, it was an American sea. Because of this, regardless of territorial claims by neighboring countries, Japan neglected military defense of the Senkaku Islands area. In fact, this was true not only for the Senkakus but also the whole of the Sakishima Islands constituting the western part of Okinawa Prefecture, none of which had either US military or Japanese Self-Defense Forces bases ready for actual use, leaving a military vacuum.

Hints at US Decline

Even so, no problems arose until the dawn of the twenty-first century, when dark clouds began to gather over the United States. A succession of events hinted at the waning of US power from the bursting of the dot-com bubble and the 9/11 terrorist attacks, through the increasing quagmire of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, to the subprime mortgage woes and subsequent financial crisis, alongside the continued polarization of public opinion under the presidencies of George W. Bush and Barack Obama. By contrast, in the same period China experienced rapid economic growth and bolstered its military capabilities.

After the United States withdrew its military from the Philippines in the early 1990s, China strengthened its presence in the Spratly Islands, claiming most of the South China Sea together with the western Spratly Islands, disputed with Vietnam.

In the same way, China has increased its military presence in the East China Sea. In 2004, a submerged Chinese nuclear submarine passed through the Miyako Strait between the main island of Okinawa and Miyako Island to its west. Although the Miyako Strait is an international strait, submarines should surface when passing through according to international law. The submarine was immediately discovered by the SDF and was targeted for sinking exercises several dozen times during its passage. After this incident, Chinese nuclear submarines and other naval vessels have continued their provocative activity, passing through the Ōsumi Strait between the Ōsumi Peninsula in Kyūshū and the island of Amami Ōshima and also the channel between the islands of Ishigaki and Yonaguni (at the western end of the Sakishima group) with the loud support of the Chinese media. In 2013, China established an air defense identification zone over the East China Sea, including the Senkakus and overlapping Japan’s own ADIZ. As a result, military aircraft from the two nations regularly approach each other performing warning maneuvers.

War by Other Means

China has a concept of “three warfares” based on which, before reaching actual conflict, it employs the strategies of media, psychological, and legal warfare to achieve effective control. In this case, the strategies have taken the form of criticizing Japan over the issue of the Senkaku Islands and challenging behavior by its vessels around the Sakishima Islands. Looked at with Mahan in mind, the waning of American power—as China perceives it—has left a military vacuum around the Sakishima Islands, which China seeks to fill. It is a strategically important area, connecting mainland China with the open ocean, and China takes no heed that under international law it is Japanese territory, sea, and airspace.

Naturally, Japan is not simply looking on idly. After the September 2010 incident in which a Chinese fishing trawler collided with a Japan Coast Guard ship, amid the anti-Japanese demonstrations in China that followed, end-of-year SDF maneuvers brought a regiment of land-based anti-ship missiles to Amami Ōshima, demonstrating the will to blockade the Ōsumi Strait. Then, after nationalization of the Senkakus in 2012, continuing coercive behavior by China included incursions into Japanese waters by its vessels and aircraft and a Chinese naval ship locking weapon-targeting radar on an SDF vessel. Japan responded by stationing anti-ship missiles on Miyako and the main island of Okinawa in its autumn 2013 maneuvers, ready to blockade the Miyako Strait.

After Abe Shinzō became prime minister in December 2012, a long-pending plan for an SDF base on Yonaguni (the westernmost inhabited island of the Sakishima group) was set into motion, along with the formation of a marine unit to be stationed there. This means that even without a US military presence, Japan will be able to defend its southwestern islands by itself and gradually develop the capability to impose a blockade; this is a red rag in the face of China.

President Obama and the US Congress still view responsibility for defense of the Senkakus as falling under Article 5 of the Japan-US Security Treaty and have made public statements to that effect, indicating that the United States has no intention of leaving a military vacuum in the area.

Regarding China’s increasingly assertive international stance, it is often difficult to tell whether its government’s actions are actually aimed at other countries or a domestic audience. In the case of the Senkakus, we can say at least that there is a will to prevent the situation deteriorating any further. By “shelving” the Senkaku issue, Beijing can avoid the claim that it is heightening military tension.

(Originally written in Japanese by Mamiya Jun of the Nippon.com editorial department and published on November 14, 2014.)

References:

Serita Kentarō. Nihon no ryōdo (Japan’s Territory). Chūōkōron Shinsha, 2002.
Ogawa Kazuhisa and Nishi Takayuki. Chūgoku no sensōryoku (China’s Military Capability). Chūōkōron Shinsha, 2014.
Alfred Thayer Mahan. The Influence of Sea Power upon History: 1660–1783. Little, Brown and Company, 1890.

Related Tags

Self-Defense Forces China Abe Shinzō APEC Okinawa Senkaku Islands Xi Jinping military navy

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