Changing The Rules Of The Game - Chinese Maritime Power and the Middle East
The growth of the Chinese Navy in recent years continues to be
of significant concern to many nations. With the resources and capability that
a rapidly growing economy and population of over 1bn people can provide, the Chinese
Navy (PLAN) has gone in barely a generation from being a littoral ‘brown water’
navy to being one of the most powerful forces in the Asia Pacific region.
The growth in Chinese naval power has not necessarily
translated into a rapid growth into a globally deployable navy. The majority of
their vessels have remained based inside the Asia Pacific region, with only
relatively limited deployments into the wider world. While there is doubtless
intent to reach globally in due course, currently Chinese deployed naval
capability outside of their local region is considerably less than that of the
US or Royal Navies.
It is significant then to spot the presence of a Chinese amphibious
vessel at the NAVDEX defence exhibition, held in the UAE , this week. For the first
time China has chosen to send a vessel to participate in this major defence exhibition,
which along with its land-based variant (IDEX), is one of the largest defence
exhibitions in the world.
![]() |
A true Blue Water Navy- Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
For decades the Gulf has been the preserve of either local
navies or units from the West. To all intents and purposes the maritime environment
has been dominated by the US Navy, which until recently regularly operated two
carrier battle groups in a confined region, to provide a visible deterrent to
nations intent on shenanigans. The presence of third-party vessels such as
Russian warships, or those of other nations was rare, and the Chinese were practically
unknown in the region.
Coming at a time of wider challenges in the relationship
between the West and its Gulf allies, the growing strength and reach of Beijing,
and the decision to send a significant warship into the Arabian Gulf and berth
in Dubai then represents another sign of the growing influence that the Chinese
are exerting in the Middle East, and poses questions for Western allies, such
as the UK about what to do about it.
There is no doubt that the Middle East is on the verge of a
potentially significant realignment of policy as the current crop of rulers well-disposed
to the west age and move on, while the next generation do not have the same deep
emotional link or blood debts to Western nations. Globally aware, and aware
that the Wests power is both diminishing and also the stricter terms by which
defence and security material is exported, the next generation of rulers are
likely to be less inclined to default and defer to Washington, London and Paris
for help and support.
The arrival of a Chinese warship at NAVDEX comes on the back
of an increasingly strong relationship between the UAE and China, which last
year saw President Xi Jinping make a three
day visit, while at the same time the number of resident Chinese has grown
from 30,000 to almost 200,000, with almost 4000 Chinese business reportedly
operating in the UAE.
This burgeoning relationship is built firmly on the roots of
international trade, with the UAE positioning itself as a key part of the Belt
and Road Initiative, a key Chinese tool to enhance trade and influence. For the
UAE the Chinese almost certainly represent a far less critical friend, one less
inclined to ask difficult questions about human rights or impose curbs on what
security equipment can, or cannot, be exported through export licences.
Compared to the West, the Chinese represent not only a
source of trade, but also opportunity to access high quality defence exports at
affordable prices. The clear desire by many nations in the region to grow their
own domestic defence industry, and also to have genuine operational control
over aircraft, rather than being reliant on a lengthy supply chain that can be
held up by Western powers easily means that China probably looks like an increasingly
attractive partner at the moment. Easy credit, quick delivery and no difficult
questions.
For China this increased trade and rapid growth of the Chinese
diaspora is both blessing and curse. On the one hand it provides a good means
of securing continued economic growth through more orders, but on the other it
begins to mean they have to take a deeper military interest in the region.
Chinese engagement in the short term may include the continued
deployment of surface ships to escort merchant vessels in regions impacted by
piracy (such as the Horn of Africa), or ensuring that in a crisis sufficient
local capability is available to conduct an evacuation of Chinese nationals from
affected regions. In the medium term there may be an aspiration to provide
forces capable of countering other nations – particularly India and the US, but
this requires a very different set of skills and capabilities.
For the Gulf states this poses a curious challenge. On the one hand they have turned to China precisely for economic reasons and access to
defence equipment. On the other, their relationship with the West has long been
built on the principle that their economic strength and oil / gas supplies would
serve as a carrot, and through judicious spreading of this wealth to sustain
the defence industry, would help bind Western nations into providing credible defence
against external aggression.
Recent events in Yemen have arguably called this into
question, as Middle Eastern military forces have proven more successful than
perhaps expected at conducting and sustaining complex
operations for a long period of time. At the same time the West has proven less reliable as an
ally – for example the US unexpectedly pulling out of Syria (there is an
argument that this is providing a good opportunity for Chinese industry to
secure an opportunity for new sales). But there remains a dependency and
assumption that some form of external support would be needed against aggression
from nations like Iran in the event of all out war.
The West could, despite challenges in the relationship,
generally be counted on to step in to protect the Gulf, particularly in
providing niche capabilities in the maritime space to keep the Straits of
Hormuz open in times of conflict, such as MCMV and carrier air power.
China by contrast is almost certainly less willing to get involved
in such an operation, nor is it likely to sense significant benefits from
acting as the guarantor of Gulf nations against Iran. It is also questionable
that, given its current military capabilities, it has the reach and means to
work to ensure that the Straits could be kept open.
For the Gulf nations then they face a genuinely difficult choice
– do they reach out further to China, trying to thicken a relationship that
would benefit them in many ways, or do they try to maintain links with the
West, despite frustrations, knowing that the West is more likely to come to
their aid in a crisis? The next few years are likely to see really difficult debate
in this space as policy makers try to
work out how to balance off two very different relationships.
One of the challenges the UK and others will face in this
period is working out how to handle the growing presence of Chinese vessels in
the region, and what this means for maritime operations. In a very constricted
area of water, where operations are generally co-ordinated between nations via
the Combined Maritime Forces HQ in Bahrain (which sits as part of the wider US
Navy 5th Fleet HQ), the presence of Chinese vessels is likely to
pose an interesting series of operational challenges that will need resolving.
More widely, the presence of a major Chinese amphibious
vessel will play well into the narrative of ‘bigger = better’ that some states
place value on in the region. The occasional or semi-regular presence will help
send a message that China is interested and cares about the region. It may also
serve as a helpful sales pitch to navies that are increasingly ambitious and
keen to expand their reach – for instance during the Yemen conflict the
Emiratis reportedly maintained a regular naval presence off the Yemeni coast (a
significant distance from their normal area of operations) and were poised to
launch an amphibious assault too, staging
out of Eritrea.
Some reports suggest it was the lack of coherent US support
for such an operation that stopped it from occurring. In turn this may help
drive the UAE towards China, not only for support, but also for an ability to
buy the sort of complex vessels needed for future operations, like landing ships
and mine warfare capability. In the medium-term China stands to benefit from
the possibility of sales of military capability to nations that are keen to
acquire capabilities they feel they have learned the hard way will not be
provided by other allies when required.
For the US and UK the challenge is how to respond to this
increased presence and what to do about it. If Chinese equipment proliferates
in service in Gulf states, it will be increasingly difficult to countenance the
selling of the most advanced weapon systems to them – traditionally Middle
Eastern nations have been good customers for modern equipment like the Eurofighter.
But, would the US really be keen to see the F35 sold to somewhere like the UAE
or Saudi if it was felt that the Chinese could potentially gain access to the
airframe or its supply and support system and compromise it?
![]() |
Royal Saudi Air Force Typhoons |
Given Chinas long standing reputation for industrial scale
theft of commercial IP and secrets as part of its modernisation programme, it
is hard to imagine that they would not try to use their growing presence and
leverage in the Middle East to secure access. In turn then this places a real
challenge for both the West and the Middle East.
The West will baulk at selling its most advanced equipment to
nations that are heavily linked to China. The Middle East will only want to buy
the most advanced and modern equipment on offer – second best is not good enough
when your chequebook is essentially bottomless. But, if the West is refusing to
sell, then you are forcing the Gulf to tread a path that steers them to China,
or even more worryingly, Russia.
In the longer term the potential difficulty in arms
exporting to the Middle East of the most advanced military equipment could pose
a real challenge for the sustainability of many Western defence companies, who
rely heavily on orders from the region to launch new products, or fund upgrade
work to existing lines.
To try to counter this slide towards the East, the West may
have to reiterate certain points to the Gulf and define its ‘offer’ through more
than just military sales. Its focus may have to be on providing niche
capability, such as MCMV or in supporting and sustaining the development of a
genuine long-term industrial base in the region that can only occur if China is
locked out of the game.
One thing is clear though, the Gulf is no longer going to be
an exclusively Western pond to operate in. There will be long term challenges
about how to respond to the Chinese presence, both in the region, and
realistically in time in the Med too. For the first time ever, we are on the
cusp of an out of region power establishing a credible and sustainable military
presence close to our strategic areas of interest.
It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that within 20-30
years the growth of the Chinese economy and military power sees the
establishment of more Chinese facilities in the Med region – to protect trade
interests and secure the safety of Chinese nationals. While this will almost
certainly not translate into some of the more paranoid fiction of the Chinese
military launching coups into small countries, it does represent a real shift
in the balance of power.
With the Gulf increasingly torn between its ties to the West
and a growing relationship to the East, and Chinese economic muscle proving an
extremely powerful tool of influence, there are long term challenges ahead.
What happens, for instance, if the Chinese gained enough influence over the Egyptian
government to ensure control of which vessels do, and do not, get to use the Suez
Canal. In its most extreme, the question must be asked as to whether the West
can take long term access to Suez for granted for its warships to head East, or
if as times change, so do the rules of the game?
Interesting post. On the point of Chinese military sales to the Middle East, Saudia Arabia has been a purchaser of Chinese ballistic missiles for decades, the National Guard use AKs, other states have done likewise. It's true that these purchases have tended to be discrete items which don't tie someone into Chinese support lines as tightly as high performance aircraft do.
ReplyDeleteWhere does China get a large chunk of its crude oil from? Answer this and you will see why the country must build a presence in the Middle East Gulf.
ReplyDelete