Chinese Strategy: A Turn to Mahan or a Practical Approach?

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In the book Red Star Over the Pacific: China’s Rise and the Challenge of U.S. Maritime Strategy, the authors discuss their interpretation of Chinese strategy as it relates to the U.S. maritime power in the Western Pacific. Dr. Yoshihara and Dr. Holmes postulate that Chinese strategists have studied Alfred Thayer Mahan’s theories of sea power. He further expounds on “China’s ability to harness such power against others or to nullify the overbearing power adversaries hold in important sea areas.”1 The book continues by presenting an argument that Chinese strategist use a combination of Mahan and Mao Zedong to cover the strategic and operational levels of war for the ultimate purpose of building maritime power in order to build a great nation. This may be one explanation for current Chinese strategy, but is there another, possibly more practical explanation? This paper will present an alternate, more practical approach to today’s Chinese strategy. Contrary to a Mahanian approach, China bases its strategy on the practical needs of a great nation undergoing a ‘peaceful development’ supported by concepts from the Chinese military classics. In essence, the development of Chinese Anti-Access/Area-Denial (A2/AD) and maritime capabilities comes as a result of the need to maintain social harmony and safeguard national interests, not in order to develop command at sea as Mahan theorizes.

At its core Mahan’s theory on sea power posed that a country which builds naval power and gains sea control will become a great empire. According to Mahan his naval strategy “differs from military strategy in that it is as necessary in peace as in war.”2 This allows applicability to the Chinese who have not seen open warfare since 1979. Mahan theorizes tha...

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... of Chinese Foreign Policy (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1993), 43.

12 The Economist, “Sun Tzu and the Art of Soft Power,” The Economist, December 17, 2011, http://www.economist.com/node/21541714/ (accessed February 7, 2012).

13 Information Office of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China, China’s National Defense in 2010 (Beijing, China: Information Office of the State Council, March 31, 2011), 6, http://www.china.org.cn/government/whitepaper/node_7114675.htm (accessed February 10, 2012).

14 Chih-Yu Shih, China’s Just World: The Morality of Chinese Foreign Policy (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1993), 44.

15 Yang Mingjie, “Sailing on a Harmonious Sea: A Chinese Perspective,” China US Focus, May 26, 2011, http://www.chinausfocus.com/peace-security/sailing-on-a-harmonious-sea-a-chinese-perspective/ (accessed on January 20, 2012).

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