THAAD will destroy regional balance
Deployment of anti-missile system, supposedly to counter nuclear threat from Pyongyang, is actually aimed at China
Despite China's strong opposition, the United States and the Republic of Korea have agreed to deploy the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system in the ROK. Although the US says THAAD is aimed at countering the "nuclear threat" posed by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, it's actually targeted at China.
Why is THAAD's deployment in the ROK strongly opposed by China?
THAAD will undermine the regional strategic balance in East Asia and create more obstacles to the peaceful settlement of the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue. When the strategic balance of a region is broken, an arms race follows, and regional disputes and conflicts intensify.
The Korean Peninsula is one of the few places in the world where the fear of war is still real. The peninsula nuclear issue has been threatening security in the region for over a decade, and negotiations, such as Six-Party Talks, to settle the issue have stalled. In such a sensitive region, THAAD's deployment could open the door to a military confrontation.
One way of rectifying the strategic imbalance is for the US and the ROK to rescind their agreement to deploy THAAD. The second way is for Beijing to strengthen its nuclear capability, as once THAAD is deployed, major parts of China will be under its anti-missile system umbrella.
The deployment of THAAD in the ROK is part and parcel of the US missile defense system in East Asia, a region of strategic importance to the US where it sees China challenging its "dominance, leadership and primacy". The US has singled out China as the target for its "rebalancing to Asia" strategy. And THAAD is an indispensable component.
John J. Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago and Stephen M. Walt of Harvard University recently published an article in Foreign Affairs outlining the "rebalancing" strategy as a superior "grand strategy" to be applied seriously by the US in East Asia and Europe. These two neoconservative theorists have identified China as "likely to seek hegemony in Asia" and call on the US to undertake major efforts "to prevent it from succeeding".
"Rebalancing to Asia" first calls for the US to "rely on local powers to contain China". Should that fail, the US may "have to throw its considerable weight behind them", the authors say.
THAAD is a case in point. The US' involvement in the South China Sea issue - supporting the Philippines in its political farce of seeking "international arbitration" and the exhibition of force by the US Navy and US Air Force - is another example of its "rebalancing" strategy.
The US is used to thinking and acting as a hegemonic power. But we live in an era of globalization where countries are more interdependent than ever. No country can be "balanced" or "rebalanced" away as the US wishes. As such, the deployment of missile defense systems in Eastern Europe and East Asia will hurt global stability.
THAAD's deployment will worsen the divide in East Asia, where regional arrangements for economic growth are shaped with China at its core while regional security is assumed to be based on the US-centered military alliances. Should this contradictory situation develop further, neither regional economic growth nor security can be sustained.
In short, THAAD is detrimental to the regional security of East Asia. No country can expect to achieve absolute security at the expense of other countries' insecurity. East Asia should enjoy peace and stability based on common and cooperative security. Therefore, the countries involved in the power game should reconsider their ill-conceived decisions in order to restore the regional strategic balance.
The author is former vice-minister of the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of China's State Council and a former vice-minister of foreign affairs. Courtesy of chinausfocus.com. The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.