Beijing
has been flexing its military muscle, opening its first overseas military base
in Djibouti and building militarized artificial islands in the disputed South
China Sea
|
China has traditionally
rejected US-style interventionism, but its deepening economic involvement in
volatile countries like Myanmar and Zimbabwe is thrusting Beijing towards a
more assertive global role, analysts say.
China's
footprint abroad is growing with its One Belt, One Road infrastructure project,
with US$1 trillion in investments across Asia and Europe
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China's
foreign policy has been guided by its principle of "non-interference in
other countries' internal affairs", which emerged in 1954 when it was a
much weaker nation.
While
Beijing remains rhetorically committed to the stance, it is now a very
different power, boasting the world's largest standing army and the second
biggest economy.
This
change has coincided with a shift in diplomatic engagement that most recently
saw Beijing take the unusual step of proposing a strategy to resolve the crisis
over Muslim refugees flooding over the border from Myanmar to Bangladesh.
It
has also stepped up its role in the Middle East -- on which it depends for oil
-- after having long taken a backseat in the powder-keg region, offering to
host talks on the Syrian and the Israeli-Palestinian conflicts.
China
is now expected to take greater responsibility in world affairs as "it's
no longer the little underdog," said Kerry Brown, director of the Lau
China Institute at King's College London.
"You
can't have an elephant pretending it's a mouse."
- 'Comfortable fence-sitting'
power -
China's
footprint abroad is growing with its One Belt, One Road infrastructure project,
with US$1 trillion in investments across Asia and Europe to revive ancient trade
routes through a massive rail and maritime network.
As
the scope of Beijing's foreign interests extend, "naturally the question
of how to safeguard those interests also comes up," said Chinese political
commentator Chen Daoyin.
President
Xi Jinping presented an ambitious goal of turning China into a global
superpower with a first-rate army during a Communist Party congress last month
that further consolidated his power.
Chen
noted that Xi vowed to "uphold the international order", implying a
much more active role increasingly similar to that of the US, which China has
decried as overly meddlesome.
Though
China would not publicly disavow its non-interventionist approach, it would
likely "gradually dilute it, so that it evolves from non-interference to
neutrality to interference," Chen said.
"When
China's national interests are harmed abroad, it's entirely possible that it
could use the need to protect its investments and diaspora citizens as an
excuse to deploy troops."
Beijing
has been flexing its military muscle, opening its first overseas military base
in Djibouti in August and building militarised islands in the disputed South
China Sea.
Yet
even without direct military intervention, China has found itself embroiled in
politics abroad despite its wish to remain an amoral political force.
Zimbabwe's
army chief, General Constantine Chiwenga, happened to be on an official visit
to Beijing days before his forces took over the country, sparking speculation
that Beijing had some role in the decision.
China
had a long-running relationship with Robert Mugabe and has significant
investments to protect in the country.
Brown
said he was "sceptical" of such rumours but they demonstrate the
impossibility of not taking sides as a superpower.
"If
people attribute power to you, you have it, you have influence," he said.
"The comfortable fence-sitting is then not very sustainable."
- No more 'glorious
isolation' -
In
Cambodia, China is the largest source of foreign direct investment, having
pumped in a total of US$11.2 billion by the end of 2016.
The
poverty-striken country's dependence on Chinese money emboldened its Prime
Minister Hun Sen to "make political moves that erode democracy and
democratic processes," said Brian Eyler, director of the Southeast Asia
programme at the Stimson Center, a US-based think tank.
"As
long as China continues to hold economic sway over Cambodia, Cambodia will
remain authoritarian without an opposition party."
Myanmar
has faced global outrage over a military crackdown on minority Rohingya Muslims
in Rakhine state that the UN has called "ethnic cleansing".
But
its government has seen unflinching support from China, which has invested
billions on ports, gas and oil in Rakhine -- including a US$2.45 billion
pipeline that opened in April.
Earlier
this month, strong Chinese opposition forced the UN Security Council to drop
plans to adopt a resolution demanding an end to the violence.
Instead,
Beijing has presented its own proposal to resolve the crisis with a ceasefire,
refugee repatriation and poverty alleviation.
"Everything
seems to have a link with China now, whether it's Zimbabwe or Burma or Sri Lanka
or political issues in New Zealand -- it's an extraordinary change," Brown
said, using another name for Myanmar.
"The idea of non-intervention has sort of become impossible. Even if China just wants to sit in glorious isolation, problems will now come and find it."
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