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Maritime Disputes: The ECS Shunji Cui Department of Political Science School of Public Affairs Zhejiang University PEAP : L13.

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Presentation on theme: "Maritime Disputes: The ECS Shunji Cui Department of Political Science School of Public Affairs Zhejiang University PEAP : L13."— Presentation transcript:

1 Maritime Disputes: The ECS Shunji Cui Department of Political Science School of Public Affairs Zhejiang University Email: ssjcui@zju.edu.cn PEAP : L13

2 Nationalism and the ECS Disputes Disputes among PRC, ROC, and Japan – has constantly re-erupted and become one of the most politically and emotionally sensitive conflicts between the Chinese and Japanese since the end of WWII. It highlights the complexities of growing nationalism in both China and Japan, and in Taiwan and Hong Kong.

3 Why? Do they know the legal, historical and geographical backgrounds of the disputes? Do they know the reasons of the other party’s claim? Why it has been so difficult for Chinese/Japanese governments to pursue conciliatory foreign policies towards each other?

4 Fishing Platform/Pinnacle Islands 钓鱼台列屿 / 尖閣列島 Diaoyutai / Senkaku Islands A chain of tiny 8 islands  5 uninhabitable islands,  3 barren rocks  All are volcanic formations from the Neocene age Largest Island  钓鱼台 / 鱼钓岛  surface area: 3.5 square km. Island Purchasing Row  2012-9-11, J government purchasing the Island

5 Geographical Location 120 nautical miles northeast of Taiwan 200 nm east of PRC 200 nm southwest of Naha, Okinawa

6 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea,1982 Territorial Waters– 12 nm  The sovereign territory of the state  But foreign ships (both military and civilian) are allowed innocent passage through it Exclusive Economic Zone—200 nm  Control of all economic resources, including fishing, mining, oil exploration, and any pollution of those resources. Legal Issues

7 Exclusive Economic Zone, if applied to Japan

8 Japanese Claim: 1895~ 1885~: 10-y survey, terra nullius (land without owner) 1895-1-14: Meiji Cabinet’s decision to incorporate the islands into Japanese territory  actual control. 1896-4-1: Placed under the administration of Ishigaki, Yaeyama District, Okinawa Prefecture 1895-4-17: Signing the Treaty of Shimonoseki 1895-5: the Treaty came to effect.

9 China’s Claim: Historical 1  Not terra nullius, but have been part of its territory since ancient times.  Historical Records: 1430, 顺风相送 (Fair winds for escort), earliest, a non-official Chinese navigational record. 1534, 使琉球录, earliest official record of the Imperial Envoy's Visit to Ryūkyū.  Those islands served as important fishing grounds administered by the province of Taiwan.

10 China’s Claim: Historical 2 1874: Japan took Ryukyu Islands Japan took Ryukyu Islands (Okinawa) from China by force when Chinese Qing Dynasty was involved in several wars with other foreign countries However, the Diaoyu Islands still remained under the administration of Taiwan, a part of China. 1895: The Treaty of Shimonoseki After being defeated by Japan in the Sino-Japan War (1894-95), China ceded Taiwan to Japan under the Shimonoseki Treaty. As a part of Taiwan, the Diaoyutai Islands belonged to Japan at that time.

11 Japan's Claim: After WWII 1951: The San Francisco Treaty (US-J)  Japan renounced claims to a number of territories and islands including Taiwan  the Nansei Shoto ( 南西 Nansei islands) came under US trusteeship 1971: the Okinawa reversion deal  Nansei Shoto ( 南西诸岛 ) returned to Japan Thus, the islands are under Japan’s control  China is just for oil  No disputes over the Islands

12 China’s Claim: after WWII Cairo Declaration (1943) & Potsdam Proclamation (1945)  Taiwan was returned to China at the end of World War II  The Japanese government accepted the terms that stated in these documents "...that all the territories Japan has stolen from the Chinese, such as Manchuria and Formosa(Taiwan) shall be restored to the Republic of China.” Thus, deny the effects of 1951 San Francisco Treaty (US-J).

13 Emerging Disputes This issue remain quiet through the 1950s and 1960s Chinese civil war, Chiang Kai-Shek’s reluctance Small uninhabited islands held little interests for the three parties? 1969: the UN Economic Commission for Asia and Far East (ECAFE) suggested possible large hydrocarbon ( 碳氢化合物 ) deposit in the vicinity of the Islands. China-Japan normalization – 搁置. Crises in the 1990s and in the 21c.

14 Main Problems and Challenges (1) International law presents many unanswered questions about the Islands dispute What is the nature of discovery and occupation for uninhabited islands? Were the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands part of Taiwan or Okinawa before 1895? How will the disputed islands affect maritime jurisdiction? (2) But the true difficulty is political, involving history and national pride on both sides.  Japan’s imperialism  China’s century of humiliation

15 The Sino-Centric World Order Until it encountered the European IS in mid-19c East Asia : A self-contained world == the ‘Chinese world order’ ‘the East Asian world order’ This Sino-centric world was a ‘regional’ society, or a ‘sub-global international system’ It developed within the area of Chinese culture and was heavily influenced by the civilisation of ancient China. It co-existed with the European society of states until the mid-nineteenth century.

16 The Sino-Centric World Order Yet it was also a unified and ‘universal’ empire, which theoretically embraced the entire world. J. K. Fairbank (1968): Although in European parlance, it became the Far East, in Chinese terms this Far Eastern world was Sino- centric. From time of the Middle Kingdom ( 中国, China), it was dominated by the Chinese empire ( 天下, all-under- heaven), presided over by the Son of Heaven ( 天子, the Chinese emperor).

17 The European Expansion to East Asia 19c, the West Expansion, the failure of normal trading and diplomatic relations. The Opium War, 1840 ~  Treaty of Nanjing with Britain (1842)  Treaty of Tianjin with Russia (1860) They were opprobrium ‘unequal treaties’  Imposed, dictated unequal obligations, compromised China’s sovereignty, symbolized evolving perception of humiliation and injustice. From Western Intrusion to Japanese Imperialism  Sino-Japanese War, 1894-95  Japanese invasion of Manchuria 1930s, and conquering most of Chinese territory 1940s

18 The Collapse of Chinese Empire The entry of China and Japan into the Western-dominated international society  indicated that end of Chinese WO But it is still important to ask as how???? The impact of external threat??? bound regional actors more strongly together against a common enemy?? If so, Western expansion might have generated a regional collective identity, a ‘we-ness’ against the ‘other’. Yet the processes telling us something different stories. There was no ‘common response’ and, indeed, if anything, regional collective identity was weakened rather than strengthened. In particular, the rise of Sino-Japanese rivalry, and Korea became the focal point in this drama.

19 The Arrival of Nationalism From Culturalism to Nationalism, 19c  Sense of victimization and humiliation  Reactive sentiment against imperialism Nationalism in the West (  though has many facets & difficult to define,  Popular sovereignty, Democracy, Human Right, National Self-Determination Nationalism in China  Though borrowed above concepts  to gain independence  Self-determination == Decolonization  Defensive, reactive, negative  Dual identity – once a great power but also a weak and victimized nation

20 Nationalism = Patriotism Nationalism (民族主义 minzu zhuyi ) Patriotism (爱国主义 aiguo zhuyi )  Loving your country,  Dislodging foreign rules (Western, Japan)  Political legitimacy  Chinese Civil War, 1946-49  Communist victory  Peoples Republic of China, 1949

21 Nationalism and National Identity in PRC, 1949 ~ Nationalism – natural development Nationalism – as a state-led ideology  Top-Down  Loyalty to the party and national unity Political legitimacy  Marxism-Leninism, Nationalism Patriotic education  Movies, songs, pictures – Official memory representation

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23 Chinese Foreign Policy in 1970s: Pragmatism and Flexibility Sino-American rapprochement Anti-Americanism: Rhetoric and Substance Sino-Japanese normalisation The policy of ‘separation’ (‘qufen-lun’) Renouncing war reparations Nationalism did little interfere FP Yet, nationalism was still an important FP tool.

24 Nationalism in 1990s Patriotic education campaign ( 国情教育 Education on national conditions)  Emphasis on continuation of one party rule  Appeal to history – China’s humiliation and suffering in the foreign hands, Nanjing Massacre, 1937. Main Reasons  Tiananmen Crackdown  The demise of Soviet Union FP were under greater pressure, less flexible  Deng Xiaoping: southern tour 1992  Invitation to the Emperor of Japan in 1992

25 Growing Popular Nationalism1980s Nationalism  from a state-led to society-driven phenomenon The controversies over Japan’s treatment of its modern history  Text book issue, 1982 ~  Yasukuni shrine visit The emerging Chinese redress movement  Wartime forced labour, comfort women, poison gas The role of internet in mobilising mass nationalist sentiment  More than 500m (June 2012) netizens, largest cyberspace country in the world.

26 Foreign Policy Implications-1 Nationalism: double edged sward  Anti-Japan  turned against its government, resulting in social and political instability?  Eg, government attitudes to redress moments  In 1992, when the J Emperor visiting China  Handling 1996 Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands disputes Pragmatic Elements V. Mass Nationalist Sentiment

27 Foreign Policy Implications-2 CCP’s policy control and freedom of maneuver: were increasingly challenged  China’s High-speed Railway  ‘new thinking’ on Japan, 2002-03  Attempts to Joint development of a disputed gas field in the East China Sea (18 June 2008 agreement)  Diaoyutai/Senkaku Islands Disputes Nationalism has increasingly become China’s FP Constrains


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