Kings of the East lust Westward

By Chuck Missler

During the ancient world empires, the locus of power-the center of gravity in the world economy-went from Persia, to Greece, and then to Rome.' It has remained in the West for the past 2000 years. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the center moved from the Mediterranean area to northern Europe, then crossed the Atlantic to America. The twentieth century turned out to be, as Henry Luce put it in 1941, the American Century.

The locus of power now appears to be continuing its move to the east. Based on present trends, the twenty-first century appears to be the Asian Century. In a little more than a decade, that region's share of world economic output has increased to 25 percent, and that figure is rising. The East's portion of the world's foreign exchange has leaped from 10 percent to more than 50 percent, and with national savings rates ranging from 30 percent to 45 percent, the East is generating more savings each year than the U.S. and Europe combined. Lest we forget, it is savings-the creation of capital-that generates economic growth. To this add 3 6.5 billion dollars per year-more than 100 million dollars per day-of capital investment flowing in from Western nations. China has attracted more foreign investment in the past five years than Japan has in the 50 years since World War 11.

However, a smooth and peaceful transition is highly unlikely. Some are predicting that the twenty-first century may be the most convulsive period in all of world history. A number of factors are conspiring to make the Far East increasingly unstable over the coming decade. These factors include:

1. China's inexorable rise to superpower status
2. The retrenchment of the U.S.
3. The existence of numerous potential causes for war
4. A burgeoning arms race.

Emergence and Retrenchment

With more than 1.2 billion people, China claims 22 percent of the world's population. Although the country is poor on a per capita basis, China's economy is growing by more than 10 percent per year. If the U.S. continues its growth of about 2.5 percent per year and China continues to grow at its present rate, the two economies will reach approximately equal size of about 8 trillion dollars in the next decade.

(It could take China a century to overtake the U.S. in per capita income, but this statistic is largely irrelevant geopolitically. The significant statistics are those indicating aggregate resources which China can command rather than the individual wealth of its citizens.) China's rapid rise to superpower status will change the balance of power in the Far East, inevitably destabilizing the region.

The inevitable retrenchment of the United States as the protector of the status quo is another aspect of our relative economic decline. Following World War II, the United States accounted for 40 percent of the gross world product (GWP). This share has now declined to 22 percent and is likely to drop still further.

Total U.S. military expenditure accounts for 30 percent of the world's military budget. For a country with 4.7 percent of the world's population and 6.3 percent of the world's land mass, it is unlikely to maintain its former level of dominance.

History shows a 20-year decline in the United States' commitment to the Pacific region:

In 1975, the U.S. was forced out of Vietnam and the Communist North Vietnamese took control of the American- built naval base at Cam Ranh Bay.

In 1976, all U.S. bases in Thailand were closed and all troops withdrawn.

In 1990, the U.S. announced a reduction of U.S. military forces in the Pacific from 135,000 to 100,000.

In 1992, the U.S. closed its naval base on Subic Bay in the Philippines, its largest base in the region. Clark Air Base was also closed.

In 1996, the U.S. announced that it would pull out of some of its bases in Japan.

These moves all point in the same direction, and the message that Asians are receiving is that they can no longer rely on America for their security.

Potential for War

Serious potential for war threatens the Far East, including the exploding population growth, numerous disputed islands, continuing border disputes, and strong ideological tensions.

Mainland China contains 22 percent of the world's population on 7 percent of the world's land mass, while arable land resources are declining at the rate of 725,000 acres per year due to erosion and other factors. Obvious targets for potential seizures include the Russian Far East, Siberia, and Central Asia. China's continuing assertiveness toward the resources in the South China Sea is also highly probable.

China's energy needs have risen by more than 50 percent over the past ten years, and the country is now the second-largest user of oil outside the U.S. Over the next two decades, China's demand could exceed three times its current production. Speculative hopes in the South China Sea will strain relations on all fronts.

Thousands of tiny islands in Asian waters are subject to competing claims. For example, six countries-China, Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei, and Malaysia-claim all or part of the Spratly Islands, which are located in the sea lane connecting the fast-growing economies of Asia with the oil-rich Middle East. One Japanese military expert predicts that whoever controls the Spratlys will gain regional hegemony in the next century.

Other islands at the center of disputes include the Paracels (Vietnam versus China and Taiwan), the Tokto Islands (Japan versus South Korea), the southern Kuriles (Japan versus Russia), the Senkaku Islands (Japan versus China and Taiwan), the Natuna Islands (China versus Indonesia), Pedra, Branca (Singapore versus Malaysia), and the Sipadan and Ligitan Islands (Malaysia versus Indonesia).

Border disputes also persist between China and Vietnam, China and Laos, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, and Cambodia and Vietnam. Each of these areas could flare up with the heightening of insecurities in the region.

Overshadowing these tensions in recent times is the pressure that China is placing on Taiwan and the potential conflict between North and South Korea. The displays of military force intended to intimidate Taiwan resulted in the U.S. moving two aircraft carrier groups into the region in March 1966. Defamatory rhetoric included threats by China to nuke Los Angeles. Despite the standoff, Beijing declared that military action against Taiwan would follow any declaration of independence, any foreign invasion of Taiwan, and any unsavory foreign military alliances.

The Korean situation also deteriorated significantly during 1995 and 1996. The movement of a North Korean force of over a million men with combat planes to the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas has positioned North Korea for a tactical surprise that could, along with its nuclear weapons, shatter the South Korea- Japan-U.S. solidarity during any initial breakouts.

Arms Race in the Pacific

The new prosperity in Asia, the shifting and uncertain balance of power, and the numerous tensions are all fueling an arms race in the Pacific that almost rivals that of the Middle East.

China has 5.4 million troops comprised of 3 million forces in active duty, 1.2 million in reserves, and 1.2 million in the People's Armed Police. It has 10,000 tanks, 18,300 heavy artillery pieces, 50 submarines, 55 warships, 500 bombers, 5000 fighter planes, 1040 support aircraft, and 17 ICBM nuclear missiles capable of reaching the Western United States. The Dong Feng (East Wind) 31 is a solid-fuel ICBM with a 5000-mile range and is launched from mobile launchers.

The Chinese navy, previously the least important figure in China's military lineup, is now prioritized as the senior service. In purely numerical terms, it is remarkably large, with 1150 ships in inventory. That is more than 3fi times the number of ships operated by the U.S. Navy. China maintains an aggressive commitment to converting its costal patrol navy into a jinhai ("green-water") navy and a blue-water navy by 2020. (A green- water navy is described as one able to operate from Vladivostok in the north to the Strait of Malacca in the south and out to the first island chain.) A world-class blue-water navy is China's scheduled goal.

China has operated up to 100 submarines over the last 30 years. In addition to substantial purchases of Russian Kilo-class submarines, the Chinese navy also boasts the Xia nuclear ballistic missile submarines, which look very much like the USS George Washington or the Russian Yankee-class boats. These subs originally carried 12JL-1 submarine launched ballistic missiles-called CSS N-3 in the West. These single-stage, solid fuel missiles resemble the Polaris A-1 and are credited with a range of 2500 nautical miles. China's multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicle payload missiles, the CSS-4, are presently being sea-tested, with a more advanced CSS-N-4 also under development.

The Chinese navy also boasts its Han-class nuclear powered attack submarines. While not as quiet as the Russian or U.S. boats, these vessels are highly respected among professionals.

China is presently negotiating the purchase of an aircraft carrier from the Ukraine, in addition to as many as 20 Kilo-class submarines. Experts do not believe that Russia has sold any wake-homing torpedoes to China, but Kilos are reported to be so equipped. U.S. surface ships still do not have any anti-wake-homing torpedo capability.

China launched its first communications satellite on a new Long March-3 rocket in April 1984. At least nine communications satellites are now available for naval links as needed. China has been using downlink data from the Japanese GMS and the U.S. Landsat, Nimbus-1, and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellites to provide critical oceanographic data to support their submarine operations.

U.S.-China Relations

The U.S.-China relationship is clearly becoming the most geopolitically important one in the world, replacing the old U.S.- U.S.S.R. rivalry. Unfortunately, U.S.-China relations have reached a low point and are getting worse. Diplomatic strains involve disputes of human rights, trade, and America's involvement with the affairs of Taiwan.

The abuses of human rights in China are beyond imagining. It has been estimated that over 60 million people have been slaughtered by the Communists.' The harvest of body parts and organs from political prisoners and other abuses have been the subject of major concerns to the West. More than 3100 slave labor camps are presently exploiting tens of millions of slave labor prisoners to produce much of the 45 billion dollars in Chinese goods exported to American markets.

China is the fourteenth-largest export market for American goods; U.S. exports to China reached 9.3 billion dollars in 1994 (yet our trade deficit with China last year was 35.9 billion dollars). To exacerbate an already strained relationship, the CIA has concluded that China has indeed recently delivered important components for missile systems to Iran and Pakistan. These components are believed to improve the accuracy of the North Korean Scud missiles already in Iran's arsenal and will enable it to build such missiles on their own. Further, in the past three months China has delivered M- 11 medium-range missiles and parts to Pakistan, in violation of an international accord.

Russian Fears

Moscow, in its desperate search for funds, has been transferring vast quantities of arms and high technology to China. This can lead to Russia's worst nightmare: an authoritarian neighbor with an economy roughly the size of America (ten times the size of Russia), but with a population four times as large, sharing a land frontier impossible to defend. Experts indicate that by 2010 China will have between 70 and 75 ground-force divisions, around 3000 combat aircraft, 60 to 70 major surface vessels, and 50 to 60 submarines. Russia's Pacific Force, on the other hand, will consist of just 15 to 20 ground-force divisions (down from the current level of 34 and the 1980 level of 46), 400 to 500 combat aircraft (down from 965 today and 1300 in 1980), 40 major combat surface vessels (down from 80 in 1980 and 50 today), and less than 20 submarines in the Pacific (down from the current figure of 35).

Russia's Far East has a history of trying to break away from Moscow's control, and in 1917 it was one of the first regions to do so. It took five years before Moscow regained control (during which a small expeditionary force of U.S. and Japanese troops landed at Vladivostok to assist the White Army against the Bolsheviks in 1919).

The massive influx of over 25 million Chinese migrants is a growing and intolerable threat to Russia's Far East. A Department of Defense study attaches an 85 percent probability to the rolling disintegration of Russia, yielding China an opportunity to encroach on the Russian Far East.

Biblical Implications

In the table of nations in Genesis 10 we find a reference to a tribe called the Sinites. Sinim is derived from a root suggesting "thorns." This suggests a people living at the extremity of the known world; some believe it is identified with the inhabitants of China. This probably derives from Ch'in, the feudal state in China from 897-221 B.C., which unified China in the third century B.C. and built the Great Wall. In later eras the Ch'in boundaries were always considered to embrace the indivisible area of China proper. It is from this dynasty that the name China is derived. (Also note the Greek sinae and the French Late Latin sinae.)

Thus we have sinology, the study of Chinese, especially with reference to their language, literature, history, and culture. The Sinitic (Chinese) languages have in common a number of features, many of which are typological in nature: monosyllabicity, tonality, affixation, indistinct word classes, use of noun classifiers, and strict word order. Phonological correspondences in shared vocabulary have been important evidence in the argument that all Sino-Tibetan languages derive from a common source.

During the Ch'in dynasty, the first governmental standardization of characters was instituted and involved some 3000 characters.' The Ch'in characters have to a large degree remained the standard to the present day.'

Archaeological researchers in Central Asia have disclosed extremely ancient seats of culture east of the Caspian Sea and have suggested the possibility of migrations from what is now Sinkiang and Mongolia (and possibly from farther west) and also of very early transmission of art forms from western Asia and southeastern Europe.

In the second half of the first millennium B.C., to protect itself from the Hsiung-Nu, a powerful group of nomadic tribes which then occupied the lands now in northern China, the Ch'in began to build the Great Wall along their northern frontiers in the late fourth century B.C. The Muslim writers in the eighth century refer to the Great Wall of China as Sud Yagog et Magog, "the ramparts of Gog and Magog."' The Muslims refer to Gog and Magog as Vadjuidj wa madjudj in the Koran.'

Prophetic Implications

In Isaiah 49:12 we also find a provocative reference: "Behold, these shall come from far; and, lo, these from the north and from the west, and these from the land of Sinim."

In Revelation 16:12 we also find the Far East joining the Armageddon conflict: "And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of the kings of the east might be prepared." It is interesting that the phrase "kings of the east" translates literally from the Greek as "kings of the rising sun" (avnatolhlj Viou). This is, however, the classic way of speaking of the East, so one might make too much of this. (Or could the Holy Spirit be hinting at something more precise than we generally suspect?)

The current rapprochement between Japan and China is extremely provocative from a prophetic viewpoint. The combination of Japan's capital and technology with the labor and raw materials of China is expected to spark, during the next decade, the biggest economic boom that planet Earth has ever seen.

The Continuing Signs

Our horizon continues to be moving toward the lineup that fits the classic biblical scenario-in Europe, the Middle East, Russia, Israel, and now also the Far East. We are indeed in the times of the signs!

I personally believe that you and I are being plunged into a period of time about which the Bible says more than any other period of time in history-including the time that Jesus walked the shores of Galilee and climbed the mountains of Judea. Each of us as believers has a twofold challenge: 1) to find out what the Bible predicts about these times; and 2) to find out what is really happening in our world today. Both are essential.

"Behold ye among the nations, and regard and wonder marvelously, for I will work a work in your days which ye will not believe, though it be told you"(Habakkuk 1:5). "The prudent man foreseeth the evil and takes refuge, but the simple pass on and are punished" (Proverbs 22:3; also 27:12).