{"id":69248,"date":"2021-12-10T06:00:54","date_gmt":"2021-12-09T19:00:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=69248"},"modified":"2021-12-09T17:55:48","modified_gmt":"2021-12-09T06:55:48","slug":"chinas-global-hybrid-war","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/chinas-global-hybrid-war\/","title":{"rendered":"China\u2019s global hybrid war"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/figure>\n

As the world\u2019s largest, strongest and longest-surviving dictatorship, contemporary China lacks the rule of law. Yet it is increasingly using its rubber-stamp parliament<\/a> to enact domestic legislation asserting territorial claims and rights in international law. In fact, China has become quite adept at waging \u2018lawfare<\/a>\u2019\u2014the misuse and abuse of law for political and strategic ends.<\/p>\n

Under \u2018commander-in-chief<\/a>\u2019 Xi Jinping\u2019s bullying leadership, lawfare has developed into a critical component of China\u2019s broader approach to asymmetrical or hybrid warfare<\/a>. The blurring of the line between war and peace is enshrined in the regime\u2019s official strategy as the \u2018three warfares<\/a>\u2019 (san zhong zhanfa<\/em>) doctrine. Just as the pen can be mightier than the sword, so too can lawfare, psychological warfare and public-opinion warfare.<\/p>\n

Through these methods, Xi is advancing expansionism without firing a shot. Already, China\u2019s bulletless aggression is proving to be a game-changer in Asia. Waging the three warfares in conjunction with military operations has yielded China significant territorial gains.<\/p>\n

Within this larger strategy, lawfare is aimed at rewriting rules to animate historical fantasies<\/a> and legitimise unlawful actions retroactively. For example, China recently enacted a land border law<\/a> to support its territorial revisionism in the Himalayas. And to advance its expansionism in the South and East China seas, it enacted a coastguard law<\/a> and new maritime safety regulations<\/a> earlier this year.<\/p>\n

The new laws, authorising the use of force in disputed areas, were established amid rising tensions with neighbouring countries. The border law comes amid a military stalemate in the Himalayas, where more than 100,000 Chinese and Indian troops have been locked in standoffs<\/a> for nearly 20 months following repeated<\/a> Chinese incursions into Indian territory.<\/p>\n

The coastguard law, by treating disputed waters as China\u2019s, not only violates<\/a> the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea; it also could trigger armed conflict<\/a> with Japan or the United States. The land borders law likewise threatens to spark war with India by signalling<\/a> China\u2019s intent to determine borders unilaterally. It even extends<\/a> to the Tibet-originating transboundary rivers, where China proclaims a right to divert as much of the shared waters as it wishes.<\/p>\n

These recent laws follow the success of the three warfares strategy in redrawing the map of the South China Sea\u2014despite an international arbitral tribunal\u2019s ruling<\/a> rejecting Chinese territorial claims there\u2014and then swallowing Hong Kong, which had long flourished under democratic institutions as a major global financial centre.<\/p>\n

In the South China Sea, through which around a third<\/a> of global maritime trade passes, Xi\u2019s regime has stepped up lawfare to consolidate Chinese control, turning its contrived historical claims<\/a> into reality. Last year, while other claimant countries were battling the Covid-19 pandemic, Xi\u2019s government created two new administrative districts<\/a> to strengthen its claims over the Spratly and Paracel islands and other land features. And in further defiance<\/a> of international law, China gave Mandarin-language names to 80 islands, reefs, seamounts, shoals and ridges, 55 of which are fully submerged.<\/p>\n

The Hong Kong National Security Law<\/a>, enacted in mid-2020, is a similarly aggressive act of lawfare. Xi has used the law to crush Hong Kong\u2019s pro-democracy movement and rescind the guarantees enshrined in China\u2019s UN-registered treaty with the United Kingdom. The treaty committed China to preserving Hong Kong citizens\u2019 basic rights, freedoms and political self-determination for at least 50 years after regaining sovereignty over the territory.<\/p>\n

The strategy\u2019s success in unravelling Hong Kong\u2019s autonomy raises the question of whether China will now enact similar legislation<\/a> aimed at Taiwan or even invoke<\/a> its 2005 Anti-Secession Law<\/a>, which underscored its resolve to bring the island democracy under mainland rule. With China escalating its psychological and information warfare, there\u2019s a real danger that it could move against Taiwan after the Beijing Winter Olympics in February.<\/p>\n

Xi\u2019s expansionism hasn\u2019t spared<\/a> even tiny Bhutan, with a population of just 784,000. Riding roughshod over a 1998 bilateral treaty<\/a> that obligated China \u2018not to resort to unilateral action to alter the status quo of the border,\u2019 the regime has built<\/a> militarised villages in Bhutan\u2019s northern and western borderlands.<\/p>\n

As these examples show, domestic legislation is increasingly providing China with a pretext to flout binding international law, including bilateral and multilateral treaties to which it is a party. With more than one million detainees, Xi\u2019s Muslim gulag<\/a> in Xinjiang has made a mockery of the 1948 Genocide Convention<\/a>, to which China acceded in 1983 (with the rider<\/a> that it doesn\u2019t consider itself bound by Article IX, the clause allowing any party in a dispute to lodge a complaint with the International Court of Justice). And because effective control<\/a> is the shibboleth of a strong territorial claim in international law, Xi is using new legislation to undergird China\u2019s administration of disputed areas, including with newly implanted residents.<\/p>\n

Establishing such facts on the ground is integral to Xi\u2019s territorial aggrandisement. That is why China has taken pains to create artificial islands and administrative districts in the South China Sea, and to pursue a militarised village-building spree in Himalayan borderlands that India<\/a>, Bhutan and Nepal<\/a> consider to be within their own national boundaries.<\/p>\n

Despite these encroachments, very little international attention has been given to Xi\u2019s lawfare or broader hybrid warfare. The focus on China\u2019s military build-up obscures the fact that the country is quietly expanding its maritime and land boundaries without firing a shot. Given Xi\u2019s overarching goal\u2014to achieve global primacy for China under his leadership\u2014the world\u2019s democracies need to devise a concerted strategy to counter his three warfares.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

As the world\u2019s largest, strongest and longest-surviving dictatorship, contemporary China lacks the rule of law. Yet it is increasingly using its rubber-stamp parliament to enact domestic legislation asserting territorial claims and rights in international law. …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":482,"featured_media":69250,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1383,52,471,204],"class_list":["post-69248","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-ccp","tag-china","tag-south-china-sea","tag-xi-jinping"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nChina\u2019s global hybrid war | The Strategist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/chinas-global-hybrid-war\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"China\u2019s global hybrid war | The Strategist\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"As the world\u2019s largest, strongest and longest-surviving dictatorship, contemporary China lacks the rule of law. 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