Matthew R. Costlow: Gunboat Diplomacy in the South China Sea, Kartoniert / Broschiert
Gunboat Diplomacy in the South China Sea
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
- Verlag:
- Nimble Books, 07/2026
- Einband:
- Kartoniert / Broschiert
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9798259502390
- Artikelnummer:
- 12829784
- Umfang:
- 84 Seiten
- Gewicht:
- 237 g
- Maße:
- 280 x 216 mm
- Stärke:
- 5 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 14.7.2026
- Serie:
- KDP Print Rescue
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Klappentext
Through the contested waters of the South China Sea pass roughly a third of the world's freighted tonnage and the energy lifeblood of East Asia-some eighty percent of China's crude oil and the bulk of Japan's, Taiwan's, and South Korea's imports. Whoever controls this sea controls the economic destiny of the world's fastest-growing economies. Gunboat Diplomacy in the South China Sea is a sharp, prescient analysis of the great-power rivalry that has come to define the region, and this Nimble Books edition makes it available with a full apparatus of original editorial scholarship. Written in 2012 by Matthew R. Costlow as a thesis at the United States Air Force Academy, the study examines the maritime show of force-the "chess match of gunboat diplomacy"-between the People's Republic of China and the United States at the dawn of the Obama administration's "Pacific Pivot." It anchors that contest in a volatile setting: seven coastal states advancing overlapping claims across 3.5 million square kilometers of sea, China asserting nearly all of it through the historical "nine-dashed line," cable-cutting incidents in Vietnam's exclusive economic zone, the 2009 USNS Impeccable confrontation, and defense budgets climbing steeply across Southeast Asia. Costlow analyzes the conflict across four levels-legal, strategic, operational, and tactical-and arrives at a provocative central thesis: the dispute "begins and ends with the Chinese," because Beijing alone combines expansive territorial claims, formidable economic and military strength, an uncompromising diplomatic posture, and demonstrated aggressiveness. His treatment of Chinese military doctrine is the book's analytical core. He reads China's buildup-the refitted carrier Varyag, a modernizing submarine force, the "game-changing" DF-21D anti-ship ballistic missile, and a layered anti-access / area-denial architecture-as fundamentally defensive, calibrated to deny a superior adversary access to China's periphery rather than to project blue-water dominance. He extends the argument into the asymmetric domains of cyber, anti-space, and sea-mine warfare, where China embraces the doctrine of "using inferiority to defeat superiority." Attentive to the fractures within Beijing's own decision-making, Costlow distinguishes hardliners from pragmatists still wedded to Deng Xiaoping's dictum of shelving sovereignty disputes for joint development. Surveying the smaller claimants-Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines-he finds them individually outmatched and collectively unable to coordinate, hobbled by ASEAN's disunity. His prescription for the United States rests on four pillars: increase military presence, deepen interoperability with regional forces, strengthen ties with ASEAN, and pursue bilateral incident-management agreements modeled on the 1972 U. S.-Soviet Incidents-at-Sea Agreement. More than a decade on, Costlow's analysis reads as remarkably prescient. The 2016 UNCLOS tribunal that struck down the nine-dashed line vindicated his legal skepticism; the gray-zone tactics he documented-substituting lightly armed maritime-enforcement vessels for warships to keep crises below the threshold of war-became the defining dynamic of the decade, culminating in island reclamation across the Spratlys. This Nimble Books edition reproduces the original thesis and adds an apparatus prepared expressly for this volume: an original Historical Context essay; two complementary abstracts-an accessible explain-it-simply summary and an advanced analytical reading that probes the gunboat-diplomacy frame; a Glossary; Indexes of persons, places, and concepts; and an original computational RKHS knowledge-graph analysis situating the work among related studies. For strategists, policy analysts, students of international security, librarians, and general readers, it is a valuable baseline against which the hardening of U. S.-China maritime rivalry can be measured.