China recently established a military base in Djibouti. Little is known
about the base except that it may have capacity to house up to 10 000 troops.
The military base has
attracted much international attention, with little
understanding of either Djibouti or China’s motives.
Turning 40 years old on 27 June, Djibouti – which has hosted military
bases of both the US (since 2001) and France (since Djibouti’s independence in
1977) – has long been considered a stable country in the conflict-ravaged Horn
of Africa.
Djibouti geographically controls access to the narrow Bab-el-Mandeb
Strait. The strait is one of the busiest maritime routes in the world and is a
strategic maritime choke point leading into the Red Sea and northwards to the
Mediterranean Sea.
Commenting for ISS Today, Dr Michael Woldemariam – an assistant
professor of international relations and political science at Boston University
– describes Djibouti’s policy of balanced diplomacy. Djibouti’s political
leaders have sought to broaden the country’s external partnerships, and China’s
big infrastructure investments and its new military facility are part of this,
he says.
Woldemariam says there is both an ‘economic logic’ and a ‘security
logic’ behind this strategy. ‘Djibouti is a small country in a difficult
neighbourhood and its government has historically faced additional internal
political challenges.’
In this context, ‘external support helps guarantee the continuity of
the existing political order’.
He says the Djiboutian government is aware of the risk of becoming
obligated to its external partners – especially Western allies that are
somewhat unreliable and fickle. Diversification of external partnerships
provides autonomy and greater freedom, he says.
Also, the port of Djibouti and the rents collected from military bases
are Djibouti’s only sources of income. China will pay $100 million annually in
rent – more than what the US and French pay.
Dr Jonathan Fisher, a widely published scholar on the Horn of Africa at
the University of Birmingham, told ISS Today that ‘Djibouti clearly sees its
regional future in continuing to leverage its two significant resources – its
port and its military facilities’.
Beyond the generous annual rent, Djibouti views China as a reliable
economic partner. China has astutely spent hundreds of millions of dollars to
turn the port of Djibouti into the region’s securest and biggest port.
China is also financing infrastructure projects totalling billions of
dollars and including international airports and railway lines that stretch to
landlocked Ethiopia, whose entire imports move through the port of Djibouti.
The crucial question is: Why has China invested so generously in tiny
Djibouti, and chosen to establish its first-ever overseas military base there?
Fisher says China appears to be negotiating a ‘new relationship with
Africa which looks increasingly like that of Western countries – focused on
protecting pragmatically calculated national interests’.
China has long term and considerable economic interests in Africa.
These include the assets and commercial interests of thousands of Chinese
nationals and numerous companies injecting investments into infrastructure and
acquiring oil and mineral resources. There are also lucrative trade prospects
with Africa, reaching a staggering $200 billion in 2013.
Qin Tian, a seasoned expert on China’s Middle Eastern foreign policy at
China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, told ISS Today that
the ‘Chinese public, commentators and companies want strong protection from the
government for their overseas interests’.
Also, China’s pursuit of military bases beyond its traditional sphere
of influence is part of its One Belt One Road initiative. This initiative
constitutes a project connecting China’s coastal areas to Africa, Asia and
Europe and passing through the Red and Mediterranean seas.
In order to allow trade to flow uninterrupted and protect emerging
infrastructure along this highly beneficial maritime route, a permanent
military presence must be established – including the shadowy military base in
Djibouti.
Nonetheless, Western governments – recognising the fait accompli with
little enthusiasm – are concerned about the military base. Apparently they see
the base as the clearest indicator of China’s pugnacious determination to flex
its muscles. The assumption is that China wants independent access to ports
stretching from the South China Sea to the Mediterranean – and as quickly as
possible; thereby potentially endangering Western interests and strategic
dominance of these seas.
Of more importance is the proximity of the military base to Western
military bases in Djibouti. This could enable China to gather intelligence
about all aerial, land-based and seaborne operations conducted from these
installations.
Beyond that, Western governments can’t easily ignore the implied risk
that more and more African governments might be pulled towards the unrivalled
trade and infrastructure diplomacy of China and so develop closer economic,
political and diplomatic ties with it.
Whatever the reasons, the military base will more than likely allow
China to enhance its influence nearer to its investments in Africa and the Red
Sea trade route.
As for Djibouti, it will allow this small coastal country to improve
its strategic options and geopolitical position in the Horn of Africa for
another 40 years – even if it means playing off the West against the Far East.
(Source: ISS)

0 Comments