US foreign policy inconsistent in recognizing
Israel’s and China’s claims to territory
There
is rarely any pretense that a country’s foreign policy is made on the basis of
anything other than a combination of domestic and economic priorities and the
pressure of often unrepresentative but influential lobbies and interest groups.
As a consequence inconsistency is the norm in diplomacy and inter-state
relations and is therefore generally ignored.
However,
there are instances when the acceptance of one state’s demands and the
rejection of another’s similar demands for legitimacy undermine any sense of
rational self-interest – often at great cost and the potential risk of
avoidable conflict.
US
foreign policy towards the contrasting claims by China and Israel that their
historic right to land or territory settled by others or within an
internationally agreed framework that defines national ownership is a pertinent
example of how such exceptionalism may be viewed simultaneously as respectively
both legitimate and unreasonable.
Washington’s
challenge to Beijing's historically-based argument that it has a sovereign
right to much of the South China Sea stands in marked contrast to its ready
acceptance of Israel's broad claims of sovereignty over much of Palestine and
de facto control over the areas not actually settled or occupied.
The
basis of the two claims differ in detail but little in perspective. Neither the
19th century Zionists who began the process that led the foundation of Israel
in 1948 nor the Chinese Communist Party which took power a year later have made
any other claims to territory without a strong historical narrative they see as
supporting and justifying their claims.
Both
claims are based on precedent - discovery in the case of Beijing's South China
Sea claims and settlement in the case of Israel’s claim to much of Palestine.
What is striking, of course, is that countless similar claims to territory can
be made by countless national, ethnic, religious or political groups. Most of
those that are made are ignored, ridiculed as frivolous or delusional, or
actively opposed through national or international sanction or force.
The
Zionist movement based its claim for a Jewish state in what it defined as the
territory once occupied by that faith's tribal ancestors. The Zionist argument,
unremarkable among numerous other political, religious, ethnic and linguistic
groups, was made truly exceptional by other events. The Holocaust provided the
Zionist project with the dimension of historical exceptionalism at the precise
moment when Britain's mandate over Palestine could - under considerable
pressure from the United States as the dominant global power - be effectively
handed over to the new state.
Israel's
foundation was therefore based less on any reading of international law than
the rapid response to the aftermath of a genocidal event by powerful patrons
able to offer the survivors a conciliatory national base, not least to partly
assuage their shared liability through inaction or prejudice for the plight of
Europe’s Jewish population. It is extremely unlikely, in other words, that
Israel would have been created without the collision of the Holocaust,
Britain’s ability as the imperial power to dispose of territory without
recourse to any form of legal arbitration on behalf of the indigenous
population and the overwhelming support of the US government.
Beijing's
South China Sea claims appear as fervent as those of the Zionist movement, but
without any of the historical confluence of events and actors that ensured
Israel moved beyond a millenarian dream into a national entity. China's claims
are predicated on usage rather than settlement and based primarily on the
'discovery' of artifacts of Chinese origin scattered among the vast maritime
region's hundreds of atolls, islets and reefs. Territorial claims made in such
a basis alone have little validity in international law for a variety of often
obvious and logical reasons.
The
mere presence, for example, of Chinese made porcelain or worked stone objects
simply reflect the fact that minerals tend to outlast wood and other fibers -
the materials used by the indigenous communities that have occupied to South
China Sea littoral for millennia. Further, such resilient objects may be traced
to the point of manufacture but not their ownership at the point they arrived
on the contested territory - shipwreck or piracy, for example, are a random
basis for a claim to sovereignty.
Further,
as with Israel, China’s appears to view its claim over the disputed sea as
inviolate and somehow prescribed by a different measure than the legal criteria
broadly accepted by most other nations. As with Israel, such a view -
reinforced in China's case with the need to match its economic strength against
a lethal mixture of self-perceived military prowess and the ever-present sirens
of nationalism - means that belief can trump legal technicalities.
Unlike
Israel, however, China’s claim is unsupported by a specific historical context,
an accommodating imperial power and allies or patrons able to smooth the way
from aspiration to realization.
Indeed,
the opposite is the case. China's rise over the past two decades has removed
most vestiges of Western guilt for that country's past humiliation and
exploitation and the US, thwarted elsewhere, now seeks to reassert its
authority and influence in Asia through increased diplomatic, political and
above all military engagement.
From
China’s perspective, the willingness of the US to accept Israel’s claimed
precedent of prior historic ‘ownership’ as the basis for occupation and
Washington’s rejection of Beijing’s demand that its sovereignty over much of
the South China Sea be universally recognized may readily construed as
deliberately provocative.
Regardless
of intent in either Washington or Beijing, the South China Sea is one of the
few arenas where China and the US can test their respective nerve under what
amounts to laboratory conditions. It is hard to imagine the outcome in what
must be viewed by both protagonists as a zero sum game will add to the
stability of the region - any more than the earlier creation of Israel achieved
in the Middle East and beyond.
Gavin
Greenwood
Asia
Sentinel
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