While we are all kept agog over
sensational headlines about continued killing of “nanlaban” suspects,
“anti-tambay” arrests, corruption in high places, Dengvaxia damage and denials,
the contentious TRAIN law and the rising cost of everything, politicians’
bickerings, celebrity squabbles, and trending presidential antics (just a
fortnight ago, it was a scandalous kiss in Korea, now it’s his “stupid God” remark),
China is still stealthily building, building, building fortresses on reefs in
our territory. In, our, territory!
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| For more photos, visit: http://www.inquirer.net/specials/exclusive-china-militarization-south-china-sea |
Photographs released exclusively by the
Philippine Daily Inquirer in February this year are alarming, to say the least,
and if they fail to make you seethe with righteous anger, chances are you’re
one of those ashamed to sing our national anthem at movie houses. The authenticated photos, taken from an
altitude of 1.5 km., clearly show such islands now studded with naval bases and
military installations, but sadly the expose could boast of only 41, 213
shares. Mocha Uson’s 5.3 million blog
followers could have done something to make a difference—if they only truly
cared.
According to the Asia Maritime
Transparency Initiative (AMTI), 2017 proved to be a bumper year for China’s
base building in the heavily disputed South China Sea. The three-kilometer runways for the three
biggest reefs—Kagitingan, Zamora, and Panganiban (which the UN-backed Permanent
Court of Arbitration in The Hague has ruled as belonging to the
Philippines)—were apparently ready for use as of November 15, 2017,
complemented by hangars, radars and high-frequency antennas, lighthouses,
missile shelters, and multi-story buildings.
Photos of the smaller reefs Burgos, Calderon, Mabini, and McKennan
revealed the presence of helipads, observation and communication towers,
radomes, and wind turbines. In the
waters, the ubiquitous cargo ships (transporting construction materials), coast
guard patrolers, and military ships were photographed so clearly their ID
numbers were legible.
“With its construction unrestrained,”
the report said, “China will soon have military bastions on Kagitingan Reef,
known internationally as Fiery Cross Reef; Calderon (Cuarteron), Burgos
(Gaven), Mabini (Johnson South), Panganiban (Mischief), Zamora (Subi) and
McKennan (Hughes) reefs from which to project its power throughout the region.” To see for yourself, go to: http://www.inquirer.net/specials/exclusive-china-militarization-south-china-sea#ixzz5Jb2LLm5S
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| For videos of what China is doing in disuted waters, go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YPFGRkI4XQ |
From the days when our biggest
territory-related problem was shooing away Chinese fishing vessels from Panatag
shoal and jailing the poachers for loading their dynamite equipped boats with
marine turtles, corals, and giant clams, China has certainly come a long
way. In 1974 the Philippine government
built an airstrip on Pag-asa, the biggest island of the Kalayaan group; the
airstrip was the first ever constructed in the Spratly archipelago, and it was
big enough for use by C-130 transport planes.
Pag-asa then also boasted of a fully-armed army and marine detachment,
but as the winds of politics blew hither and thither, securing Pag-asa was
pushed down the priority list of succeeding administrations. Meanwhile, the Chinese fishermen continued to
brave the Philippine coast guard’s patrol boats and to doggedly harvest goodies
from our rich marine resources. And now,
looking at the photos of China’s military installations in the region—wouldn’t
you even suspect that those Chinese fishermen were actually spies?
I wouldn’t wonder. Years back, we at the FOCAP (Foreign
Correspondents’ Association of the Philippines) were almost sure that the
correspondents from Xinhua News Agency, a nice, well-mannered husband-and-wife
tandem, were spies in disguise. It
wouldn’t be impossible, we were told, that their hotel room was bugged, and
that they were also under oath to spy on each other! That’s Chinese espionage for you—but, given
China’s determination to become the number one imperial world power, its
espionage methods have grown so sophisticated through the years that its cyber
espionage has been considered a threat to national security by their enemies.
But lest we fear that we are the only
one being bullied by China’s powers-that-be, let us look at the bigger picture
in the hope to see the real root behind China’s land-grabbing binge. Would you believe local authorities in China
bully even their own farmers? Here’s
just one instance of farmers tearfully protesting land seizures and being
beaten with metal pipes by their own countrymen, filmed by Al Jazeera: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBO8UL-INXA.
China has also been eating up the
Himalayan borderland it shares with India—“bite by kilometer-size bite.” As reported in The Wall Street Journal in September 2014, there have been 1,171
Chinese transgressions from January 2012 to June 2014 along the 2,500-mile-long
border. One of India’s foremost
strategic thinkers, Brahma Chellaney, likens China’s land-grabbing strategy in
India to its tactics in the South China Sea.
In India, China first sends civilians like herders, farmers, and grazers
to settle the land. (In the Philippines,
these “civilians” would be the fishermen.)
Once the civilians are in place, says the report, the People’s
Liberation Army comes in to provide protection, allowing them to establish a
more permanent presence in the area.
When a foothold is gained, Chellaney says China begins “cutting off
access to an adversary’s previously controlled territory and gradually
surrounding it with multiple civilian and security layers.” While no single action may be construed as
an alarming aggression, over time, the territorial grab expands. Sounds familiar, right?
Just last April, the Pentagon expressed
concern for the US over China’s reported massive land grabbing in Maldives,
which is in India’s backyard. “We have seen concerning developments in
Maldives as far as the Chinese influence is concerned,” said Joe Felter, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense for South and Southeast Asia, in a report in the Hindustan Times, corroborating the
allegation made by a former foreign minister of Maldives, Ahmed Naseem, that
China was meddling in the island nation’s internal affairs and appeared to be keen on building a base which one day may
house warships and submarines. Maldives’
former president Mohamed Nasheed last February also revealed in an interview
with the Times of India that
the Chinese who have taken control of 17 islands in the Maldives, are “talking about investing $ 40 million in
each of the islands but we don’t really know what is the purpose for that.”
And who
could forget how China in 1950 invaded Tibet for its natural resources, seized
the Potala Palace for its treasures, and drove Tibet’s spiritual leader, the
Dalai Lama, out of their sacred land and into exile, in order to militarize the
strategically important border with India?
The Dalai Lama—speaking of the atrocities the Chinese invaders inflicted
upon his people then—told me in 1981, when we met in Bali, Indonesia, “No other
people on earth could be more charming than the Chinese, just as none could
match them in their brutality.” The whys
and wherefores of that land-grab could fill volumes, and it could show us that
China will stop at nothing to expand its territories—plans for which at present
include the Moon and Mars.
Remarkable
strides in China’s space program seem to show that the Chinese Communist Party
is bent on making its mark on the space race.
In 2013, president Xi Jinping promised his people that China will send a
taikonaut (Chinese astronaut) to the
moon by the 2030s, but now they are speaking of sending colonies to the moon
and Mars, targeting to beat the US and Russia to it. Those planets are no man’s territory as far
as China is concerned—thus, the first one who gets there gets to own it, and to
make maps to subsequently prove their ownership. China announced last April that it would send
late this year a lunar probe that would conduct biological experiments
unprecedented in space history, such as planting potatoes and cultivating
silkworm. Huh? From military installations on reclaimed
islands in the South China Sea to planting potatoes in the moon—what’s China up
to?
A 73-year
old Party official, aerospace engineer and head of the Chinese lunar
exploration program, Ye Peijan, sums it up when asked (at the CCP’s annual
plenary sessions in Beijing last year) why China is going to the moon: “The
universe is an ocean, the moon is the Diaoyu Islands, Mars is Huangyan Island.
If we don't go there now even though we’re capable of doing so, then we will be
blamed by our descendants. If others go there, then they will take over, and
you won’t be able to go even if you want to. This is reason enough.”
Does
that sound Confucian or confusing? The
Diaoyu Islands Ye Peijan speaks of refers to Senkaku in Japan, and Huangyan
Island is Panatag Shoal. Why Ye should
cite such names when the topic is lunar occupation mirrors the CCP’s stand that
China goes into space not as a matter of national pride or scientific
achievement, but simply to beat their competitors in wresting control of new
land from other nations.
Where
does that leave us now—supposedly God-fearing people who love fiestas in a
country whose president calls their God “stupid” and is playing dangerous
footsies with China? It's more obvious than obvious that it's not just siopao or hopia factories China has been building in territory that is legally ours. War is out of the
question—our weapons are but blowguns compared to China’s, but how can we
really rely on diplomacy with a control-obsessed Leninist leadership that acknowledges
no authority above itself?
Many see
our situation as helpless. But are we,
really, that helpless? These are times
to go down on our knees and invoke the mercy of our God, the One who led His
people out of slavery and parted the Red Sea for their safe passage (Exodus 14:21-31)— the same Living God
who sent fire upon Elijah’s sacrifice in Mt. Carmel for all to see that his God
is God (1 Kings 18:16-45). In spite of their best intentions, our politicians
are never saviors; even the most brilliant among them cannot stand up to a
fire-breathing dragon. But we have God
and His promise to rely on: “If my
people who are called by My name humble themselves and pray and seek My face
and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, will forgive
their sin, and will heal their land.” Mr. President, call me stupid, but I do
believe this, with all my being. And that’s
the truth.

