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Seen by:China Needs to Change Mideast Foreign Policy
By James M. Dorsey
China’s decision to veto a condemnation of Syria’s regime at the United Nations... more
By James M. Dorsey
China’s decision to veto a condemnation of Syria’s regime at the United Nations Security Council is just the latest signal that illustrates the need for a fundamental change in Chinese foreign policy.
The question is no longer whether officials in Beijing will abandon the principle of non-interference in other countries’ affairs to protect their expanding interests around the globe. The question is when.
China joined Russia in vetoing last weekend’s resolution partly for fear that backing the UN’s rebuke of a government’s brutal suppression of its people may come back to haunt China itself, given its treatment of Tibetans and of Uighur Muslims in the Xinjiang autonomous region.
Yet China’s economic growth and associated need to secure resources increasingly have been at odds with this long-standing policy of being aloof. That’s especially true in the resource- rich region that stretches from the Atlantic coast of Africa to Central Asia and the subcontinent, much of which is now in revolt.
Over the past year, a series of incidents in the region have tested China’s non-interference policy, but without serious damage to the country’s image. With China’s veto of the UN resolution on Syria, Chinese determination to cling to a principle rooted in 19th-century diplomacy seems set to backfire.
Painted Into Corner
Rather than portray China as a global power that seeks good relations with all and -- unlike the U.S. -- doesn’t meddle in other countries’ affairs, last weekend’s veto of a relatively toothless condemnation of the regime in Damascus has painted China into a corner. The nation now appears to support an international pariah that brutally suppresses its people, a stance that risks roiling ties with some of China’s most important energy suppliers in the Arab League, which sponsored the defeated UN resolution.
In Libya, China initially avoided its policy dilemma. There, the Chinese abstained from voting on a UN resolution that effectively authorized international military intervention in Libya on humanitarian grounds. Chinese diplomats then went a step further. They supported a Security Council resolution that imposed an arms embargo and other sanctions on the regime of Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, and endorsed referral of the regime’s crackdown to the International Criminal Court in the Hague.
China cultivated relations with both Qaddafi’s embattled regime and the Benghazi-based rebels. Yet that evenhanded approach didn’t prevent the rebels from threatening a commercial boycott, particularly after they found documents purporting to show that Chinese defense companies had discussed the supply of arms with Qaddafi operatives. A Chinese Ministry of Commerce delegation visited Libya this week in a bid to recover at least some of the losses that China, Libya’s biggest foreign contractor, suffered with the evacuation last year of 35,000 workers who were servicing $18.8 billion worth of contracts.
The Arab revolt is certain to force not only a revision of China’s policy of non-interference but also of the employment practices of Chinese companies. With new and long-standing governments in the region desperate to reduce unemployment -- a key driver of the revolts -- authorities in Libya and elsewhere are likely to demand that Chinese construction companies employ local, rather than imported, labor.
Social Media Criticism
Moreover, Chinese authorities have twice in recent days come under criticism in the country’s social media for the government’s inability to protect workers abroad after 29 Chinese nationals were kidnapped by rebels in Sudan’s volatile South Kordofan province, and an additional 25 were abducted by restive Bedouin tribesmen in Egypt’s Sinai Desert. The critics charged that as a superpower, China needed to project its economic, as well as its military, muscle to stand up for those who put their lives at risk for the national good -- much like the U.S. sent Navy Seals to rescue two hostages in Somalia.
Censors were quick to remove the critical messages from social media because they touched a raw nerve. A policy of winning friends economically rather than make enemies by flexing military muscle is increasingly inconsistent with China’s dislike of appearing weak and vulnerable. National pride was at stake. The dilemma sparked public debate, with official media saying China needs time to build the necessary military capability to intervene when its nationals are in jeopardy, while others argue that China’s inaction may encourage further attacks.
The need for a revised approach to the Middle East and North Africa, as well as countries such as Pakistan and Afghanistan, will become increasingly clear as China boosts its investment in Central and South Asian nations before the scheduled 2014 withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan, where China has secured oil and copper rights.
Reports that China is considering establishing military bases in Pakistan’s insurgency-plagued northwestern tribal areas near the border with Afghanistan, and a naval base in the Balochistan port city of Gwadar, could create further pressure for change. China holds the Pakistan-based East Turkestan Islamic Movement responsible for attacks last year in Xinjiang’s city of Kashgar. Defeating the movement is key to Chinese plans to keep regional trade and energy flowing, and the bases in Pakistan may tempt China to take on a role as local policeman.
If it takes an event to drive a change of China’s foreign policy, Yemen may prove to be the spark. With $355 billion worth of trade with Europe and a quarter of China’s exports traveling through Bab el Mandeb -- the strait that separates Yemen from Somalia and Djibouti -- China cannot afford a collapse of law and order in Yemen. The crisis-ridden country is countering multiple threats, including an al-Qaeda insurgency after mass protests and intercommunal fighting that forced the resignation of President Ali Abdullah Saleh and paved the way for elections later this month.
Policy Breached Before
China has breached its non-interference policy to respond to these pressures in the recent past. Its deployment of naval vessels off the coast of Somalia to counter piracy, for example, constituted the first Chinese venture of its kind.
But China’s status as an emerging economic superpower demands that it become a more muscular global actor to pursue its interests. Ultimately that will mean taking positions on domestic disputes and conflicts around the world that have a bearing on China’s global national-security interests, the very opposite of the stance it adopted on Syria. Similarly, China will need to maintain military bases in key regions that serve to secure Chinese demand for natural resources, and to satisfy domestic calls to ensure the safety of its nationals abroad.
In short, China will have to use virtually the same tools employed by the U.S., shouldering the risks of a foreign policy that is interest-driven and therefore, at times, contradictory.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.
7. Documente Diplomatice Române, seria I, vol. 12 (1884-85)
by Rudolf Dinu
editat de Rudolf Dinu (coord.), Alin Ciupală, Antal Lukacs, Râmnicu Vâlcea, Ed. Conphys Press, 2010: CCXCVIII+957 pp.
4. Documente Diplomatice Române, seria I, vol. 11 (1883)
by Rudolf Dinu
editat de Rudolf Dinu (coord.), Alin Ciupală, Antal Lukacs, Bucureşti, Ed. Academiei Române, 2006: CXC+600 pp.
25. „Elita diplomatică a Vechiului Regat în corespondenţa privată. (1) Alexandru Marghiloman (1900-1901)”
by Rudolf Dinu
in Revista Istorică, nr. 3, 2011
The present study focuses on the use of private correspondence in the XIX century diplomacy. It discusses the role of... more The present study focuses on the use of private correspondence in the XIX century diplomacy. It discusses the role of private correspondence, in particular the one between diplomats and the Sovereign, respectively between diplomats and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, with the purpose of defending State’s secrets and rationalizing decision by avoiding the administrative control outside the epistemological community of decision makers and diplomats. It also underlines the importance of private correspondence as source in the analyze of the way foreign policy was designed and implemented in the XIX century. Key words: secret diplomacy, diplomatic elite, decision making process, private, correspondence.
Traduttore, traditore. À propos d'une correspondance arabe-latine entre l'Empire almohade et la cité de Pise (début XIIIe siècle)
in D. Aigle, P. Buresi (eds.), Les relations diplomatiques entre le monde musulman et l'Occident latin (XIIe-XVIe siècle), ns Oriente Moderno, 88/2, 2008, p. 297-309
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Seen by: and 1 moreLa chancellerie almohade
Co-authored with Hicham El Aallaoui,published in P. Cressier, M. Fierro and L. Molina (eds.), Los Almohades: problemas y perspectivas, t. 2, Madrid, CSIC (Collection Estudios árabes e islámicos, Monografías), 2006, p. 477-503.
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Seen by: and 3 moreLes plaintes de l'archevêque: chronique des premiers échanges épistolaires entre Pise et le gouverneur almohade de Tunis (1182)
in N. Martinez (ed.) M.J. Viguera and P. Buresi (dir.), Documentos y manuscritos árabes del Occidente musulmán medieval, Madrid, CSIC (col. DVCTVS, 2), 2010, pp. 87-120
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Seen by:« Les documents arabes et latins échangés entre Pise et l’Empire almohade en 596-598/1200-1202 : la chancellerie au cœur des relations diplomatiques »
to be published in Anne Regourd (ed.), Documents et histoire, Paris, Louvre-EPHE, 2011
Most of the texts produced by the Almohad Chancery have been transmitted to us solely through quotations in... more Most of the texts produced by the Almohad Chancery have been transmitted to us solely through quotations in literature: chronicles, literary or poetical anthologies, bio-bibliographic dictionaries of the scholars of the time. Most of these documents, copies rather than originals, have been published by Évariste Lévi-Provençal (1941) and Aḥmad ʿAzzāwī (1995-2006). This process of transmission of the documentation raises many questions of a diverse nature, concerning notably conservation, disappearance and dispersion of the archives, as well as processes of rewriting documents. Indeed, from one author to another, the quoted letters reveal a great number of variations which provide substantial information concerning terminological, ideological, political or administrative aspects. Furthermore, some of the published documents originate from a manual of chancery whose author, Aḥmad al‑Balāwī, was a secretary-scribe in the Almohad Chancery during the first decades of the 13th C. The original manuscript of this manual can be found in the Royal Library of Rabat. It contains models of letters: appointment of governors or judges, letters of information or recommendation, letters-fatwá, letters of allegiance to new sovereigns (bayʿa), the study of which opens interesting new horizons. Nevertheless, we possess a small amount of original documents, acts of the provincial Almohad chanceries, which have been available for a long time as they are conserved in Western collections, especially Italian ones. Their publication and translation, dating from the 19th C., explain the fact that they have been neglected since that time. This paper proposes a fresh view of those original documents, enlightened by a renewed historiography of the questions.
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Seen by: and 13 moreMémoires sur l'Empire Ottoman
by Kerekes Dóra
L'ambassadeur francais a Constantinople, Pierre de Girardin (1685--1689) connait bien l'Empire ottoman. Il parlait et écrivait la langue. Ses mémoires sur les devenues et les repenses de l'empire sont curiosité de l'époque.
erdumn, ucht, carayut´iwn. Armenian aristocrats as diplomatic partners of Eastern Roman Emperors, 387-884/885 AD
published in: Armenian Review 52 (2010) p. 139–215.
This paper deals with the diplomatic relations between the Armenian aristocracy (as a whole and as individuals... more This paper deals with the diplomatic relations between the Armenian aristocracy (as a whole and as individuals respectively) and the most important neighboring Christian monarch, the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Emperor. The study concentrates on the period from the partition of Greater Armenia (387 AD) between Rome and Persia and the end of the Arsacid rule until the renewal of the Armenian monarchy under the Bagratids. During these centuries characterized by the absence of an Armenian King, foreign powers came to terms on the one hand with individual powerful noblemen, who were appointed to represent the entire Armenia, bearing the title of marzpan, sparapet, patrik and others, while on the other hand they negotiated directly with various aristocratic houses (as they did in former times). Based on contemporaneous Armenian, Greek, and other sources the paper aims to analyze the contents of the covenants between Armenian aristocrats and Byzantine Emperors (declaration of allegiance, bestowal of titles, military assistance, etc.), the diplomatic means and customs (oath, presents, charters – the “diplomatics of diplomacy”), the sources’ terminology and the interpretation of the relations between the Emperor and the Armenian aristocracy given by the sources. The description of these relations in the Armenian sources is consequently compared to the depiction of those of the Armenian aristocrats’ to the Sasanian Great King and the Arab Caliph. In that way, a “Byzantinocentric” interpretation of Armenia’s foreign relations during this period should be avoided, while at the same time efforts are made to detect specific elements of the Armeno-Byzantine political relations in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages.
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Seen by: and 21 moreExternal Features of Historical Documents In the Computer Supported Editing
In: Congresso internacional sobre sistemas des información história. Ponencias y mesas redondas, 1998, 173 – 177.
The Link between National Foreign Policy and the Performance of a Country in the European Union: The Polish Case
Journal of Contemporary European Research
