Later this year, the European Union (EU)
will consider lifting the Tiananmen Square arms embargo against the
People's Republic of China (PRC). The U.S. and the EU imposed the
embargo following the June 1989 crackdown on democracy protestors
in Beijing. This paper presents a range of opinions to help
confront this nettlesome issue that has crept into the
trans-Atlantic relationship.
American Concerns
In
general, Americans are not pleased with the change in EU policy.
First, perhaps, among their concerns about the policy change is
China's refusal to renounce the use of force against Taiwan. In
light of China's ongoing military buildup, Beijing might decide to
coerce or take military action against Taiwan. The "Anti-Secession"
law is not encouraging. Yet more to the point, the sale of EU arms
to China could mean that European weapons would be used against
American servicemen in a Taiwan contingency.
Second, a lifting of the EU arms embargo
might further exacerbate the shift in the balance of power across
the Taiwan Strait. In the next few years, the cross-Strait
conventional military balance of power will move decidedly in
Beijing's favor. This change might lead Beijing to perceive an
ability to resolve Taiwan's future through force. This sort of
miscalculation has the potential for catastrophic results.
Third, in some quarters there is
significant concern that China wants to succeed the U.S. as the
preeminent power in the Pacific. Increased Chinese military might
derived from EU arms sales could eventually allow Chinese forces to
deter, delay, or deny American military intervention in the
Pacific. Though many Asian countries welcome Chinese economic
opportunities, they are concerned about Beijing when it comes to
security matters. Some strategists believe that China also has an
eye on subjugating Japan and dominating Southeast Asia. Australia
and Japan have already expressed their unhappiness with the EU's
policy change.
Fourth, China's conventional arms, weapons
of mass destruction (WMD), and ballistic missile proliferation
behavior are of great concern. The PRC's export control laws leave
a great deal to be desired. Willful government-supported
proliferation is even more troubling. China's relationship with
North Korea, Iran, Burma, or even Syria could lead to sensitive
European technology falling into the wrong hands.
Finally, China's human rights record
remains deeply troubling and scarcely merits reward. As recently as
2004, Chinese security services harassed and detained the
justice-seeking mothers of Tiananmen Square victims, political
activists, and Internet users. In fact, some suggest that China's
human rights record has regressed since 1989. Once the arms embargo
is lifted, the EU will lose significant leverage with China
regarding human rights. In addition, ending the arms embargo would
send the wrong signal to other repressive regimes.
Perceptions of European Motivations
Why
is Europe thinking of making this change? Probably the most
dominant belief is that the EU is trying to curry favor with China
for preferential treatment in commercial market transactions. China
is one of the world's hottest economies, and lifting the sanctions
may lead to large deals for EU firms such as Airbus. If the
political climate is right, the PRC may also look to EU companies
for high-speed rail, telecommunications, satellites, energy
generation plants, or even high-end nuclear plants as China's
insatiable appetite for energy grows.
A
second--and more sinister--reason is to open a new arms market for
European weapons in China. The PRC is a veritable cash cow for arms
sales. China's defense budget currently runs between $50 billion
and $70 billion per year, including plenty of money for arms
purchases. With declining defense budgets for Europe's beleaguered
defense firms, China provides a golden opportunity for selling arms
in a growing market.
Third, from a political perspective, some
EU members may be pushing their fellow members to acquiesce on this
issue because if the new arms policy should go awry (e.g., the use
of EU weapons against political dissidents, Tibetans, or Uighurs),
the EU can spread the political responsibility for the policy
change across the breadth of EU membership. By altering the policy
under the EU's umbrella, some states will inoculate themselves from
their constituents' disapproval for backing down on China's human
rights record.
Finally, some cynics believe that the EU
is attempting to balance American global power through the
development of a "multi-polar" world. In such a construct, American
power could be counterbalanced by other power centers such as
China, Russia, Japan, India, and the EU. In this construct, making
China more powerful will help Europe challenge the United States'
global pre-eminence.
Chinese Motivations
No
doubt China has motivations of its own. First, Beijing continues to
seek political absolution among the international community for the
Tiananmen Square massacre. The recent death of former Communist
Party leader Zhao Ziyang is another nail in the coffin for the
requirement that the Chinese government account for its actions at
Tiananmen. The lifting of the EU embargo would be another.
Second, because the PRC's main
advanced-technology arms supplier is Russia, China is looking for
some competitive pricing and alternative sources for the arms it
currently buys from Moscow. With the U.S. and EU currently out of
the Chinese arms market, it is a seller's market for the
Russians.
EU
arms producers can compete with Russian arms producers in terms of
quality and (possibly) price. This would turn the Chinese arms
market into a buyer's market for Beijing, decreasing dependence on
Russian arms and enhancing the likelihood of generous,
advanced-technology transfers to the Chinese arms industry as part
of any arms deal. The Chinese may also be hoping that the EU's
decision will lead to pressure in Washington from defense firms to
do the same. (However, a change in American policy is highly
improbable.)
Third, Beijing is hunting for military
technology it cannot find elsewhere, especially in the Russian
market. The Chinese can find top-notch fighters, diesel submarines,
destroyers, and surface to air missiles in Russia, but they may not
be able to find the necessary command, control, communications,
computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems
it needs to make these other systems more effective. The EU may be
just the market for such technology.
Fourth, Beijing would like to drive a
wedge into the trans-Atlantic alliance. China certainly would not
object to having an ally in the EU, especially when jousting with
the United States in the U.N. Security Council or other
multilateral institutions about issues such as Iran's nuclear
program. China just signed a $70 billion gas/oil deal with
Iran.
Fifth, it should come as no surprise that
a lifting of the arms embargo would be seen as a significant defeat
for the Taiwanese in Europe, and would support China's desire to
increasingly isolate Taiwan from the international community in
hopes of early unification. It could be argued that if the
Europeans sell arms to China, they should sell them to Taiwan as
well.
Conclusion
There are sure to be consequences to the
trans-Atlantic relationship over a decision to lift the arms
embargo against China. America's perception of Europe--already
troubled because of Iraq--will not be improved. Americans,
especially veterans, would gasp at the thought that European arms
might be used against American service personnel in a Taiwan or
Korean contingency. Americans may also resent a decision on the
part of the Europeans that will negatively alter the security
situation in a region (i.e., the Pacific) in which they have little
or no responsibility for security.
Even
with the advent of a new arms sale Code of Conduct, and other
regulations, the Bush Administration will be unhappy. Congress,
however, will react most strongly. There will certainly be attempts
to clamp down on defense industrial cooperation with European firms
and prohibit the Department of Defense from purchasing defense
articles from EU businesses that sell arms to China.
The
United States welcomes China's peaceful integration into the
international community as an open and free society through
commerce, tourism, academic exchanges, and official dialogue. These
activities maximize the free world's efforts to encourage positive
political and social change for 1.3 billion Chinese.
But
in the end, the EU's decision to lift the arms embargo against
China will not help close the trans-Atlantic divide, and may
perhaps even widen it. The decision will also be perceived as an
imprimatur of dismal human rights records everywhere. Finally, it
could increase the likelihood of military conflict in the Pacific,
which is no one's interest--not even the EU's.
Peter Brookes is Director of the Asian
Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation. This speech was
delivered in Brussels, Belgium at the European Security
Forum.