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  • Energy First; China and the Middle East

    Energy First: China and the Middle East
    By Jin Liangxiang

    Middle East Quarterly
    Spring 2005

    China's Middle East policy is undergoing a major shift. Traditionally,
    Beijing considered the region too distant for significant investment and
    instead limited its efforts to convincing Arab capitals to sever their
    ties to Taiwan and establish diplomatic relations with the People's
    Republic.[1] Beijing's first diplomatic victory in the Arab world was
    the formal establishment of relations with Egypt in 1956. The Chinese
    Foreign Ministry completed its mission of establishing ties to each Arab
    country when China and Saudi Arabia exchanged ambassadors in 1990. With
    China's economic boom, though, Beijing's Middle East policy has taken on
    new importance. While Washington's Middle East policy has traditionally
    been activist, Beijing's policy was more restrained. But Chinese
    passivity in the region may end in coming years, as the Chinese
    government's need to achieve energy security forces a more active policy.

    China's Quest for Energy

    For decades after the 1949 establishment of the People's Republic,
    energy concerns were only a minor factor in Beijing's national security
    assessment. After all, the Daqing oil field, 600 miles northeast of
    Beijing, discovered in 1959, had since 1962 produced enough oil to keep
    the nation self-sufficient. This changed, however, as China's economy
    developed. Since the 1978 initiation of economic reforms, China has
    enjoyed an almost 9 percent annual growth rate.In 1993, China became a
    net importer of oil and, in 2003, with a daily demand of 5.5 million
    barrels per day, Chinasurpassed Japan to become the second largest
    international oil consumer after the United States.[2]

    While China has boosted its own domestic production, demand is outpacing
    domestic supply. By 2020, China might produce 3.65 million barrels per
    day but will likely require more than twice that to meet its needs.
    While Chinese scholars suggest that oil imports will account for 60
    percent of Chinese energy needs, [3] the International Energy Agency
    believes that the figure could behigher.[4] While analysts may quibble
    over the actual figure, there is consensus that the Chinese thirst for
    oil will only increase.

    As China's thirst for oil has grown, energy security has become a major
    consideration of its Middle East policy. While the Middle East accounted
    for less than 40 percent of China's oil imports before 1994, since 1996,
    the proportion has risen to over half. In a June 2004 lecture, Han
    Wenke, deputy director of the Energy Research Institute of China's
    National Development and Reform Commission, argued that China should
    "make full use of international influence and comprehensive national
    strength to strengthen international cooperation with major oil
    production countries and exporting countries in fields of politics,
    economy and trade and diplomacy."[5] In many ways, Han's statement is
    more a description of current Chinese policy rather than proscriptive
    advice.As Table 1 (below) indicates, Iran and Saudi exports together now
    represent almost two-thirds of China's Middle East oil imports.

    While China's imports from smaller producer countries rise and fall, the
    Chinese partnerships with major producers such as Saudi Arabia and Iran
    have increased exponentially. Whereas in 1994, Iran accounted for just
    one percent of China's total imports, less than a decade later, Beijing
    purchased $2 billion (US) of oil from Tehran, representing more than 15
    percent of its total 2002 oil imports. Today, the figure is probably
    larger still. In October 2004, the head of China's National Reform and
    Development Commission and Iranian oil minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh
    signed a memorandum of understanding regarding bilateral energy
    cooperation. According to the agreement, the Chinese government will buy
    10 million tons of Iranian oil each year for the next twenty-five years.
    In return, China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation (Sinopec), the
    nation's second largest oil producer, may develop the Yadavaran oil
    field in Iran's western Kurdistan province, giving China a 50 percent in
    terest in the field's estimated 17 billion barrel reserve. Yadavaran
    could be China's biggest oil investment in the Middle East.[6]
    Nevertheless, China-Iran trade should be kept in perspective. While the
    China trade may be significant for Iran, the opposite is not true.
    Bilateral Sino-Iranian trade accounts for only 0.6 percent of the
    Chinese total.[7]

    The recent growth in Chinese oil imports from Saudi Arabia has less to
    do with politics than with technicalities. Saudi oil tended to have too
    high a sulfur content for Chinese refining capability. The Chinese
    government has turned the impediment into advantage, though, as it gives
    Beijing an opportunity to engage the Saudis not only politically but
    also economically. Both Beijing and Riyadh are working jointly to
    establish capable oil refineries. The Chinese government has already
    approved a joint Sino-Saudi petroleum and chemical project in China's
    eastern Fujian province, and the Chinese government included the joint
    Qingdao refinery in China's eastern Shandong province in its tenth
    five-year plan (2001-05).[8]

    Beijing's strategy has not been limited to importing oil and increasing
    China's own refining capacity but has also included increasing bilateral
    cooperation in Middle Eastern production. The China National Petroleum
    Corporation, China's largest energy company, began operating in Sudan in
    1995. After a decade of continuous investment, the corporation was able
    to boost Sudanese oil production to 250,000 barrels per day.[9] More
    recently, on March 7, 2004, Sinopec, in partnership with Saudi ARAMCO,
    signed a natural gas exploration and development agreement in Ar-Rub~Q
    al-Khali, the so-called "Empty Quarter." Sinopec maintains a four-fifths
    share.[10]

    Beijing views the Middle East not only in terms of its value as a source
    of oil but also in the context of its huge potential as an oil services
    market. Early in 1979, Chinese labor services companies entered the Gulf
    Cooperation Council markets. By 2001, China had signed almost 3,000
    contracts in all six Gulf Cooperation Council states for labor services
    worth $2.7 billion. The overseas construction arm of China National
    Petroleum Corporation moved into the Kuwaiti market in 1983, and a major
    business expansion took place in 1995 when the group won an oil storage
    reconstruction project in Kuwait. Since then China has expanded into oil
    services in Egypt, Qatar, Oman and other parts of the Arab world.[11]

    China's growing economic ties with the affluent Persian Gulf emirates
    have not been unilateral. In July 2004, the six Gulf Cooperation Council
    finance ministers visited China where they signed a "Framework Agreement
    on Economic, Trade, Investment, and Technological Cooperation" with
    China and agreed to negotiate a China-Gulf Cooperation Council free
    trade zone.[12]

    Iraq Policy: Symbol of New Activism

    Beijing's policy to pursue good relations with every Middle East
    government has extended to Iraq. China and Iraq established diplomatic
    relations on August 25, 1958, shortly after the July revolution ousted
    the Iraqi monarchy and installed a republic. Over subsequent decades,
    despite frequent and sometimes violent changes in the Iraqi government,
    bilateral relations remained stable. Chinese companies were once very
    active in the Iraqi labor services market. From 1979 to 1990, Chinese
    companies signed 662 labor services contracts with Iraq amounting to
    almost $2 billion. After the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, Beijing
    suspended its economic relations with Baghdad in accordance with the
    relevant U.N. resolutions. While Beijing had donated humanitarian
    assistance to Iraq through channels such as the International Red Cross,
    Chinese firms suspended their investments in Iraq until the 1996
    inauguration of the United Nation's oil-for-food program.[13] Even after
    the formal resumption of Iraqi oil exports under U.N. supervision,
    Beijing's purchases from Saddam Hussein's Iraq never accounted for more
    than 10 percent of China's total Middle East oil imports and never
    exceeded 5 percent of China's total oil imports. Chinese economic
    interests in Iraq have not dominated Beijing's stance on political and
    diplomatic questions regarding the troubled country.Consistent with the
    Chinese foreign ministry's stance on proliferation and the Iranian
    nuclear issue, Beijing sought to resolve the Iraq issue within the
    framework of the United Nations, a reflection of Beijing's traditional
    opposition to military intervention.[14] While Beijing opposed the
    eventual war, its position was much more moderate than that of France
    and Russia, both of whom threatened to wield their Security Council veto.

    In recent months, and consistent with Beijing's evolving Middle East
    policy, Beijing has become more assertive on the Iraq issue. In May
    2004, China's United Nations mission raised a proposal to enhance the
    Iraqi interim government's real power by setting a date for a U.S.
    military withdrawal. Russia, France, and Germany supported China's
    proposal, which was reflected in the final text of U.N. Security Council
    Resolution 1546.[15] While an American audience might simply see
    Security Council members seeking to undercut U.S. power, veteran China
    watchers found Beijing's actions far more significant because China
    seldom raises its own proposals on the Middle East.
    Respecting American Concerns

    In the aftermath of the 9-11 terrorist attacks and especially after the
    Bush administration showed its willingness to use military power against
    Afghanistan and Iraq, many Arab governments expected that the Chinese
    government would become a more assertive player in the Middle East as a
    counterbalance to American dominance. In an interview with Renmin Ribao
    (People's Daily), China's leading newspaper, Syrian president Bashar
    al-Assad said, "China is now a superpower and is very important after
    the absence of the Soviet Union. China's role has expanded across the
    world and has become more important especially for small countries
    including Syria."[16]

    Assad sought the Chinese government's support against increasing U.S.
    pressure. On an emotional level, it is a plea that has resonance among
    Chinese policymakers. Because the Chinese government feels that their
    country was victimized by Western powers prior to the 1949 communist
    revolution, Chinese diplomacy has long maintained the principle of
    equality among nations big or small in international affairs.
    Nevertheless, consideration of the U.S. position still matters. China
    abstained on the vote for U.N. Security Council Resolution 1559, which
    demands a Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon.[17]

    Within the corridors of Washington, Beijing's outreach to the Arab world
    may be cause for concern. In prepared testimony for a 2003 hearing
    before theCongressionalU.S.-China Economic and Security Review
    Commissionon China's energy needs and strategies, Roger W. Robinson,
    chairman of the commission, and C. Richard D'Amato, vice chairman,
    argued that China's approach toward oil-rich countries "may also
    encourage China to offer incentives to energy supplier nations, as it
    has in the past, including missile and WMD [weapons of mass destruction]
    components and technologies, for secure long-term access to energy
    supplies."[18] Other experts worry that China might transfer arms,
    missile components, or conventional or unconventional technology to
    countries sponsoring terrorism in order to safeguard its own energy
    security.

    Such concerns are misplaced. Yitzhak Shichor, a professor of East Asian
    studies at the University of Haifa and perhaps Israel's foremost China
    expert, argues that China has been a marginal, almost insignificant
    player in the Middle East arms market, with the possible exception of
    tactical missiles.[19] For more than a decade, China has made tremendous
    improvements in its non-proliferation commitments. China is now a
    signatory to the Nonproliferation Treaty, both the Chemical and
    Biological Weapons conventions, as well as the Comprehensive Test Ban
    Treaty and the Missile Technology Control Regime. In addition, the
    Chinese legislature,the National People's Congress of China, has passed
    laws to administer export of both arms and military technologies. The
    Chinese government has worked to demonstrate commitment to counter
    proliferation efforts by training nineteen chemical weapons inspectors
    for the U.N.' s Monitoring, Verification, and Inspection Commission
    (UNMOVIC) in September 2002. China also seconded two of its own arms
    experts to UNMOVIC when Iraq inspections resumed in November 2002.[20]

    The Chinese involvement in UNMOVIC signals an aspect of broader Chinese
    policy that remains applicable to the Middle East. Beijing's policies
    emphasize reliance on mediation through international bodies. This holds
    true with regard to the Iranian nuclear issue.[21] The Chinese
    government has encouraged the Iranian government to cooperate with the
    International Atomic Energy Agency and ratify the additional protocol
    that would avoid serious punishment.

    While the economic motivations for China's new activism in the Middle
    East may be significant, the importance of security cannot be
    underestimated. China shares a 20-mile border with Afghanistan.
    Following the 9-11 terrorist attacks, China gave strong support to the
    U.S.-led war against the Taliban and has subsequently, both politically
    and financially, supported the new government of Afghan president Hamid
    Karzai.[22] Beijing's support for U.S. actions in Afghanistan was in
    part a reflection of its own security concerns. The Taliban cooperated
    with Al-Qaeda, which in turn supported the East Turkistan terrorist
    forces that threatened the stability of China's northwestern Xinjiang
    Uighur autonomous region. Between 1990 and 2001, East Turkistan
    terrorist forces, based in western Xinjiang, staged more than 200
    attacks in Xinjiang, killing 162 people of all ethnic groups, including
    grassroots community le aders and religious personnel. Several hundred
    more were wounded.[23]

    Supporting an Arab-Israeli Resolution

    While some Washington officials may be concerned about China's new
    outreach to the Middle East, both Chinese and U.S. concerns remain
    remarkably consistent. The United States seeks energy security. So, too,
    does China. The United States opposes terrorism. So, too, does China.
    The United States supports Arab-Israeli peace. So, too, does China.

    Israel was the first and, until 1956, the only country from the Middle
    East to recognize the People's Republic of China, even though the two
    countries did not exchange ambassadors until 1992. Unlike many Arab
    countries, Israel never recognized the government in Taipei although
    Israel and Taiwan did pursue military ties.[24]

    China's new activism in the Middle East is also reflected by its recent
    involvement in Arab-Israeli diplomacy. At a September 17,2002 press
    conference, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman declared that Beijing
    had decided, at the request of several Arab states, to appoint a special
    envoy to the Middle East. The Foreign Ministry dispatched veteran
    diplomat Wang Shijie, who had previously served as ambassador in
    Bahrain, Jordan, and Iran, to the region.[25] When Wang returned to the
    region in his new capacity two months later, he reiterated Beijing's
    positions: China both supported the concept of "land for peace" as the
    basis of Arab-Israeli peace and recognized the need for an independent
    Palestinian state. However, Wang emphasized that Israel's security
    should be guaranteed, a position the Chinese government first enunciated
    in 1991.[26]

    Wang has subsequently visited Israel and all of its neighbors and has
    also consulted with the special envoys of the Quartet: the United
    States, Russia, European Union, and United Nations. Beijing's new
    involvement reflects very practical concerns: peace can bring the
    stability needed to ensure a stead flow of oil. As a possible future
    mediator, China further needs to maintain its traditional relations with
    Arab states and engage Israel as well. Israeli politicians seem to
    recognize this. When meeting his Chinese counterpart, Tang Jiaxuan,
    during his trip to Beijing in March 2002, Israeli foreign minister
    Shimon Peres said that Israel appreciated Chinese diplomatic efforts and
    suggested that China play a larger future role.[27] Peres reiterated the
    message six months later when the two foreign ministers again met while
    attending the U.N. General Assembly in New York.[28]

    The willingness of Beijing and Jerusalem to cooperate diplomatically in
    pursuit of Arab-Israeli peace does not mean that the Sino-Israeli
    relationship is without its bumps. Israel's 1994 decision to receive the
    Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader, briefly strained relations,[29]
    as have occasional Chinese condemnations of Israeli operations in
    Palestinian areas. Another case in point was Israel's July 2000
    decision~Wunder heavy U.S. pressure~Wto cancel the sale of the Phalcon
    airborne early-warning radar system.[30]

    The most recent contretemps in Sino-Israeli relations is also connected
    to bilateral military cooperation. According to a report in Ha'aretz,
    the United States demanded that Israel not return to China some of the
    drones the Chinese military sent to Israel for upgrading, even though
    these drones are Chinese property.[31] Regardless of the eventual
    outcome of the dispute, in some ways the damage has been done. If Israel
    does not meet its commitments to upgrade the drones, contractual terms
    would lead Beijing to likely launch sanctions on Israeli enterprises not
    only on the Chinese mainland but also in Hong Kong.[32]

    High-level visits can repair some of the strain in relations. Every
    Israeli president since Chaim Herzog, as well as prime ministers Yitzhak
    Rabin and Benjamin Netanyahu, has visited China. In June 2004, Israel's
    deputy prime minister Ehud Olmert visited Beijing. Several Chinese
    officials have reciprocated the visits, most prominent among them
    President Jiang Zemin and Vice Premier and Foreign Minister Qian Qichen
    in April 2000. The latest high-level bilateral exchange was the visit on
    December 28, 2004, by Chinese state councilor Tang Jiaxuan, former
    Chinese foreign minister, to Israel following his visit to the
    Palestinian Authority.
    Conclusions

    Although the changes are "slow and subtle,"[33] China's foreign policy
    is undergoing transformation. When interviewed by the Zhongguo Qingnian
    Bao(China Youth Daily), one of China's leading newspapers, Wu Jianmin,
    former Chinese ambassador to France and currently president of the China
    Foreign Affairs University, said that China's diplomacy is transforming
    from "responsive diplomacy" (fanying shi wwaijiao) to "proactive
    diplomacy" (zhudong shi waijiao)."[34] American scholars have made
    similar observations.[35]

    The age of Chinese passivity in the Middle East is over. Beijing will
    play an increasingly active role in the region with the goal of securing
    its own energy security. This does not mean that Chinese and American
    policies will necessarily be at odds. Beijing understands and, indeed,
    shares U.S. concerns regarding proliferation and terrorism. Just as
    Washington seeks to maintain good relations with both the Arab world and
    Israel, so too will Beijing.

    There will be differences of opinion, however. While Beijing supports
    Arab domestic reform, consistent with its opposition to unilateral
    action, the Chinese government will strongly oppose any outside attempts
    to impose reform. China's stance is closely linked to its sentiment of
    national sovereignty and its up-to-now successful experience of reform.
    Only through candid dialogue can better policy coordination be achieved.
    But Washington would be mistaken if it expects that Beijing will
    placidly revert to its past passivity. China's new activism is a
    reflection of Chinese interests~Wespecially in the energy sector. Beijing
    and Washington can work together. But if U.S. strategic calculations in
    the Middle East do not take Chinese interests into account, then they
    will not reflect reality.


    Jin Liangxiang is a research fellowat Shanghai Institute for
    International Studies

    NOTES

    [1] Deng-ker Lee, "Peking's Middle East Policy in the Post-Cold War
    Era," Issues and Studies, Aug. 1994, pp. 69-94.

    [2] International Energy Agency (IEA), Oil Market Report, Mar. 11, 2004,
    p. 12.

    [3] Wu Lei, Zhongguo Shiyou Anquan(Beijing: China Social Science Press,
    2003), pp. 121-6.

    [4] IEA, China's Worldwide Quest for Energy Security (Washington, D.C.:
    IEA, 2000), p. 19.

    [5] Han Wenke, "Energy Supply and Security Guaranteed by Strong Reliance
    on Domestic Resource and Economic Introduction of International
    Resource," speech at the Seminar on International Energy Security and
    Cooperat ion, Shanghai, June 24-25, 2004.

    [6] Wang Yichao and Zhang Fan, "Zhongyi Dadan Yi Shichang Huan Shiyou,"
    Caijing, Nov. 15, 2004.

    [7] "2003 nian 1-12 yue Jinchukou Shangpin Guojia Zongzhi Biao,"Ministry
    of Commerceof the People's Republic of China, Feb. 11, 2004.

    [8] "Zhongsha Jingmao Hezuo Xianzhuang,"Economic and Commercial
    Counsellor's Office of the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in
    Saudi Arabia, accessed Jan. 31, 2005.

    [9] "Zhongguo Sudan Jingmao Hezuo Gaikuang,"Ministry of Commerce of the
    People's Republic of China, May 2003.

    [10] "Natural Gas Exploration and Development Agreement upon Section B
    in Ar-Rub' al-Khali signed among Sinopec, Saudi Arabia ARAMCO Petroleum
    Co. and the Ministry of Petroleum of the Kingdom of Saudi
    Arabia,"Sinopec Corporation, accessed Jan. 31, 2005.

    [11] Anwar Yusuf Abdullar, director, Department of Energy, Gulf
    Cooperation Council General Secretariat, "Sino-Arab Energy Cooperation:
    Problems, Approach and Outlook," speech at the Seminar on International
    Energy Security and Cooperation, Shanghai, June 24-25, 2004.

    [12] "The Joint Press Communiqué between the People's Republic of China
    and The Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf (GCC),"
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Re public of China, July 7,
    2004.

    [13] "Shuangbian Guanxi," Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's
    Republic of China, updated on July 28, 2004.

    [14] Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, news
    conference, Mar. 18, 2003; idem, "Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Liu
    Jianchao's Comment on the Establishment of the Iraqi Interim
    Government," June 2, 2004.

    [15] "The Situation between Iraq and Kuwait," Security Council
    Resolution 1546, June 8, 2004.

    [16] Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA), June 21, 2004.The report of the
    interview was not carried in the Chinese media.

    [17] "Security Council Declares Support for Free, Fair Presidential
    Election in Lebanon," U.N. news release, Feb. 9, 2004.

    [18] Roger W. Robinson and C. Richard D'Amato, statement before the
    U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, U.S. Congress, Oct.
    30, 2003, p. 3.

    [19] Yitzhak Shichor, "Mountains out of Mole hills: Arms Transfers in
    Sino-Middle Eastern Relations," Middle East Review of International
    Affairs (MERIA), Fall 2000, p. 73.

    [20] He Hongze and Xu Xueliang, "Zhongguo Hecha Zhuanjia Zai Yilake,"
    HuanQiu Shibao(Beijing), Dec. 2, 2002.

    [21] "Statement by Ambassador Zhang Yan on Iranian Nuclear Issue,"
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, Sept. 30,
    2004; "Spokesperson's Remarks on Iran's Strengthening of Its Cooperation
    with IAEA," idem, Oct. 22, 2003.

    [22] Renmin Ribao (Bejing), Jan. 25, 2002.

    [23] Ibid., Jan. 21, 2002.

    [24] P. R. Kumaraswamy, Israel's China Odyssey (New Delhi: Institute for
    Defense and Studies and Analyses, 1994), pp. 67-70; idem, "China and
    Israel: Normalization and After," China Report, vol. 34, no. 3-4, pp.
    265-86.

    [25] Chinese Foreign Ministry news conference, Sept. 17, 2002.

    [26] Wen Hui Bao (Shanghai), Mar. 22, 1991.

    [27] Renmin Ribao, Mar. 26, 2002.

    [28] Ibid., Sept. 17, 2002.

    [29] The Jerusalem Post, Mar. 21, 1994.

    [30] Jonathan Adelman, "The Phalcon Sale to China: The Lessons for
    Israel," The Jerusalem Letter, Mar. 1, 2002; Shichor, "Mountains out of
    Molehills," p. 73.

    [31] Ha'aretz, Dec. 22, 2004.

    [32] Guoji Xianqu Daobao (Beijing), Jan. 7, 2005.

    [33] Evan S. Medeiros and M. Taylor Fravel, "China's New Diplomacy,"
    Foreign Affairs, Nov./Dec. 2003.

    [34] Zhongguo Qingnian Bao (Beijing), Feb. 18, 2004.

    [35] Medeiros and Fravel, "China's New Diplomacy."


    This item is available on the Middle East Forum website, at
    http://www.meforum.org/article/694

    --Boundary_(ID_TOorPIAKW0S98Isxleflfw)--
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