Why the Battle for Supremacy
in Asia Begins with China’s Coast Guard
Beijing’s
patrol vessels often resemble warships. Now other nations are trying to compete
with tougher coast guards of their own.
Seeking
to dominate the strategic waterways of Asia, China has deployed an armada of boats
that are equipped with 76-millimeter cannons and anti-ship missiles, and are bigger
than U.S. Navy destroyers. But they are not Chinese Navy vessels. Their hulls are
painted white, with “China Coast Guard” in block letters on the sides.
In just
a decade, China has amassed the world’s largest coast guard fleet, and it is like
no other. More militarized, more aggressive in international disputes and less concerned
with the usual missions of policing smugglers or search and rescue, the Chinese
force has upended 200 years of global coast guard tradition.
It has
also set off an arms race. Powering into a gray zone between
law enforcement and naval power, Beijing has targeted rivals with ships that can
easily sink the vessels most coast guards have used for decades. And in response,
other countries that fear Chinese encroachment are rushing to deploy bigger, more
heavily armed patrol boats of their own.
From
March 30 to April 2, a squadron of Chinese Coast Guard ships circled the contested
islands that Japan calls the Senkakus for 80 hours and
36 minutes — China’s longest-ever stay, according to maritime data.
Two more
recent incidents also point to new levels of Chinese assertiveness and regional
risk:
From
ports in southern China and Taiwan to American bases in Guam, white-hulled coast
guard vessels are getting longer and heavier, or smaller and faster. Their guns
are also getting bigger, or they are being built to allow for complex weapons systems
to be bolted on at a moment’s notice. And the region’s coast guards are working
more closely with defense planners, putting them at the
vanguard of broader contests in the Indo-Pacific over economic and military power.
“The
idea,” he added, “is that it’s more effective because you’re less likely to push
up the escalation ladder because they’re lightly armed. But when a coast guard vessel
gets missiles on it, how is it different from a navy vessel except for the color of the paint on the hull?”
The coast
guard competition now emerging in Asia began with China’s push to become what it
called a “maritime great power.”
That
phrase, setting out a national priority, appears in Chinese government documents
as far back as 2000, with a definition that includes naval power, fishing prowess,
environmental protection and the advancement of territorial claims. The coast guard’s
leading role was solidified in 2013 under Xi Jinping, who, in his first year as
China’s leader, created the seagoing force by consolidating five agencies.
The coast
guard, in China’s eyes, would be a pillar of its rejuvenation as a world power because
it would help Beijing control important waterways (and their fishing and mining
riches) without spurring a military response from countries flummoxed by the fleet’s
not-quite-military heft.
Regional
experts say the provisions violate international law by allowing China’s coast guard,
without declaring war, to engage in warlike behavior beyond
its national jurisdiction.
And its
boats increasingly have the power to do so. China now has around 150 large coast
guard patrol ships of at least 1,000 tons, compared to roughly 70 for Japan, 60
for the United States and just a handful for most countries in Asia. The Philippines
has 25 patrol ships to deploy in the South China Sea. Taiwan’s coast guard consists
of 23 boats, according to U.S. officials.
Many
of China’s coast guard vessels are former navy corvettes, capable of long-endurance
operations and equipped with helicopter pads, powerful water cannons and guns the
same caliber as those on an M1 Abrams tank. According
to the most recent Defense Department report on China’s
military, 85 of its coast guard vessels carry anti-ship cruise missiles.
Increasingly,
so too have the coast guards of other countries.
Vietnam
ordered six large coast guard ships from Japan to be delivered by 2025.
South
Korea announced last year that it would build nine new 3,000-ton patrol ships for
the seas off its western coast, where the maritime boundary with China is unclear.
Japan
approved a law in December that will increase its coast guard budget by nearly $1
billion — a 40 percent surge — and fold the fleet into its national defense forces.
The United
States and Australia have also become more active in the Pacific with gifts of
patrol boats, new maritime surveillance centers and, for
the Americans, a new generation of larger Coast Guard cutters and patrol
agreements with several nations — adding Papua New Guinea just in recent weeks.
The United
States is also now working more closely with Japan and the Philippines in the South
China Sea, conducting joint coast guard training exercises in the Philippines last
year and again this June, drawing complaints from Beijing.
“The
coast guards and different nations in the region are maturing,” said Vice Adm. Andrew
J. Tiongson, the U.S. Coast Guard’s Pacific Area commander. “I think they’re maturing
out of necessity.”
Nowhere
is that dynamic more obvious than in the Taiwan Strait and the shipyards of southern
Taiwan. On an island at the center of regional anxieties,
Taiwan’s coast guard is expanding far more rapidly than its Navy while confronting
almost daily challenges from China.
On one
recent visit to an industrial area just outside the port of Kaohsiung, workers put
the final touches on repairs for a coast guard patrol boat whose nose had been sheared
off at sea.
“A Chinese
ship hit this boat and broke right through it,” said Hu Yenlu,
a former Taiwanese Navy officer who runs Karmin International,
a company that builds and repairs Taiwanese Coast Guard vessels.
A few
weeks earlier, he said, the patrol boat — a 36-foot rigid inflatable, similar to
assault craft used by U.S. Navy Seals — had helped form a cordon with a few others
around a suspicious-looking speedboat near Taiwan’s outer islands. That boat had
six engines, a common design for China’s maritime militia, and when the Taiwanese
Coast Guard asked about its mission, the pilot pushed the throttle and punched through.
“There
was no name on that ship, but we know it was Chinese,” said Mr. Hu, recounting the
story officials had told him. “When you don’t see a name, you know it’s suspicious.”
It was
one of many collisions and near misses caused by aggressive Chinese tactics near
Taiwan, according to maritime officials and boat builders.
On June
3, the U.S. military said that an American naval destroyer, the U.S.S. Chung-Hoon, slowed to avoid a possible collision with a Chinese Navy
ship that crossed in front of the Chung-Hoon as it passed
through the strait between China and Taiwan.
China’s
threat in April to inspect Taiwanese vessels represented another kind of climb up
the escalatory ladder. The response to it revealed the blurring lines of aggression
at sea.
Taiwan’s
Ocean Affairs Council said it had responded to China’s threat by employing a coast
guard boat of its own as a shadowing force to “prevent mainland China from endangering
the freedom of navigation and safety of our citizens.” A spokesman for Taiwan’s
office overseeing relations with Beijing said: “If you interfere, we will hit back.”
A second
shipyard near the port in Kaohsiung offered hints of what that might mean.
A new
100-ton patrol boat bobbed in the water with a strong steel hull rather than the
lighter materials of earlier iterations, for protection in case of ramming. On one
of the piers, a 600-ton coast guard vessel with a fresh coat of white paint waited
for engineers to add the same radio and radar that Taiwan’s Navy uses.
On the
side, there was a wide gap in the hull — for missile launchers, if needed.