CAN
CHINA HELP SAVE SYRIA?
By Joel Wuthnow
As the international community
considers how to respond to the recent massacre of 108 civilians in the SYRIAN
town of Houla, many eyes are focused on the position of RUSSIA. This makes
sense, given Moscow’s strategic interests in SYRIA, and its reluctance to
approve international sanctions in the past. Yet attention should also be given
to attitudes in CHINA, which not only holds a permanent seat at the U.N.
Security Council, but also has significant economic leverage at its disposal.
It’s understandable that observers,
including Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, should encourage the
Obama administration to redouble its pressure on Moscow. RUSSIA, after all, is
the SYRIAN government’s top arms supplier, and maintains a link to the
MEDITERRANEAN through its naval base at Tartus.
CHINA’S OVERALL STAKES IN THE SYRIAN ECONOMY SURPASS THOSE
OF RUSSIA
But RUSSIA isn’t the only great
power with significant interests in SYRIA – CHINA also deserves mention. Indeed,
CHINA’S overall stakes in the SYRIAN economy surpass those of RUSSIA. In 2011,
SYRIA imported at least $2.4 Billion in goods from CHINA. Imports from RUSSIA
were less than $1.9 Billion. CHINA’S trade is facilitated, in part, by a
SYRIAN - CHINESE Businessmen Council, formed after Assad’s inaugural visit to
CHINA in 2004.
CHINA HOLDS LARGE EQUITIES IN SYRIA’S OIL INDUSTRY
Perhaps more importantly, CHINA
holds large equities in SYRIA’S oil industry. The CHINA National Petroleum
Corporation holds minority stakes in two of SYRIA’S largest petroleum
companies, and has signed multi-billion dollar deals to assist in the
exploration and development of SYRIA’S oil producing regions. CHINA has also
stepped in as an important consumer of SYRIAN oil in the aftermath of an EU
embargo.
Might CHINA be willing to break with
RUSSIA and support an elevation of pressure on SYRIA, such as sanctions or even
an International Criminal Court indictment for individual perpetrators?
The answer depends on two factors.
One is the situation on the ground. Continued bloodshed not only poses a grave
humanitarian challenge, it also jeopardizes CHINA’S economic interests and the
lives of any remaining CHINESE citizens in the country. As a result, further
violence may give CHINA’S leaders doubts about the viability of a hands-off
approach.
COLLAPSE OF THE ASSAD REGIME WILL LEAD TO A DESTABILIZING
POWER VACUUM
The problem with this argument is
that CHINESE officials and experts are concerned that a potential collapse of
the Assad regime will lead to a destabilizing power vacuum. One Middle East
expert that I talked with in Beijing, who had received delegations from the
SYRIAN opposition, reported that he was not convinced that the opposition would
be able to form a sustainable unity government, and that instability in a
post-Assad SYRIA may precipitate a wider regional conflict.
Similarly, in contrast to LIBYA,
Beijing has retained positive ties with the Assad regime. It was arguably
easier for the U.S. to enlist CHINA'S support against Gaddafi, who had alienated
CHINA just as he had alienated states in the region, than against Assad. For
these reasons, CHINA will be even more reluctant to embrace regime change, or
even policies that may result in a collapse of the regime.
axis of evil or counterbalance? |
The second factor is the political
costs associated with shielding the regime. CHINA has already encountered
regional opposition. During the Security Council’s deliberation on a draft
resolution aimed at the violence in SYRIA in February, CHINA’S U.N. ambassador
found himself surrounded by delegates from the Arab world urging his government
to abstain, and not use the veto. To the surprise of some Western observers,
CHINA ultimately did use the veto.
There has been comparatively little
pressure on Beijing from Washington, London, Paris and other Western
governments. With attention focused on RUSSIA, and with Beijing’s support
needed on a raft of other issues, including NORTH KOREA and IRAN, there hasn’t
been a sustained effort to convince CHINA that international pressure is necessary
to alleviate the suffering in SYRIA.
STEM VIOLENCE AGAINST CIVILIANS AND AVOID A COLLAPSE OF THE
REGIME SEEMS TO BE A GOAL SHARED BY THE U.S., WHICH IS SIMILARLY SKEPTICAL
ABOUT THE SYRIAN OPPOSITION
Might such a campaign be effective?
It’s certainly possible.
The message to Beijing should
be twofold. First, coercion, when done properly, may be able to stem violence
against civilians and avoid a collapse of the regime, a goal shared by the
U.S., which is similarly skeptical about the SYRIAN opposition. A case must be
made to CHINA that any U.N. resolution, or other types of multilateral action,
aren’t aimed at regime change, but at preventing further atrocities by the
government or government-directed militias.
Second is that a willingness to use
its economic and political interests will accrue diplomatic goodwill to CHINA,
in the same way that its bilateral interventions with the SUDANESE government
over Darfur did. The case of SYRIA – and, in particular, its reaction to the
crimes against humanity perpetrated in Houla – offers CHINA an opportunity to
prove that it has the intention to play a constructive, and not merely a
reactive, role on the world stage. It’s up to the UNITED STATES and its allies
to make clear that there are benefits to cooperation, and costs to continued
opposition.
See
also next article: THE SYRIAN EQUATION to be published soon
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