Vietnam's Pivot
How Hanoi Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the United States
By David Brown in Foreign Affairs
SEPTEMBER 9, 2014
Vietnam's
 international strategy is shifting in a dramatic fashion. For years, 
the country hoped that it could manage China’s drive for regional 
hegemony by showing Beijing sufficient deference. To that end, officials
 in Hanoi worked to cultivate ties with their Chinese counterparts and 
pursued friendships with all countries, Vietnam’s ASEAN neighbors 
especially, but alliances with none. 
But that strategy 
has been upended in recent months. In May, China deployed a $1 billion 
oil drilling rig and more than 100 ships to locations only 130 nautical 
miles off of Vietnam's central coast, well within Vietnam's exclusive 
economic zone (EEZ) -- the maritime area extending 200 nautical miles 
from a country’s shores over which it has special exploration and 
resource exploitation rights.  Hanoi responded with a total of 30 
diplomatic overtures to Beijing; China rejected all of them, refusing 
even to receive the secretary-general of Vietnam’s ruling Communist 
Party, Nguyen Phu Trong. When Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi came 
to Hanoi on June 18, it wasn’t to apologize but, rather, to upbraid the 
Vietnamese for their own behavior -- that is, for their protests against
 the oil rig and for allowing anti-Chinese demonstrations to get out of 
hand. Chinese media portrayed Yang as giving Vietnam a chance “to rein 
itself in before it's too late.”
China's deployment of the
 deep sea rig should not have been a surprise. At least since 2009, 
Beijing has aimed to achieve de facto hegemony over the South China Sea,
 and Vietnam's offshore oil sector has been a prime target. Beijing's 
threats induced oil multinationals BP and ConocoPhillips, both heavily 
invested in China, to abandon concessions in Vietnamese waters in 2009 
and 2012 respectively. In 2011, Chinese vessels harassed survey ships 
belonging to the Vietnamese oil company PetroVietnam. In 2012, China's 
Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) invited foreign companies to bid for 
the rights to explore nine blocks of territory overlapping Vietnam's 
EEZ.
At the end of July, Vietnam was awash with rumors 
that the country’s Politburo had voted 9–5 in favor of “standing up to 
China.” There was also talk that an extraordinary plenum of the 
200-member Party Central Committee would convene to review and confirm 
the Politburo's new tilt. The rumors may simply reflect the wishful 
thinking of a public that's been far more disposed to tangle with China 
than its leaders have been. Beijing and Hanoi are still pro forma 
friends; Le Hong Anh, Vietnam's top cop and a stalwart of the pro-China 
faction, was correctly welcomed in Beijing in mid-August and doubtless 
warned against unfriendly moves. Even so, chances are good that Vietnam 
will soon take two game-changing steps.
First, Vietnam 
will likely challenge China in international courts, seeking a verdict 
that declares Beijing's assertion of "historic sovereignty" over nearly 
all of the South China Sea to be illegitimate and its 
tactics impermissible. Hanoi initially considered such a move last year,
 when the Philippines invited Vietnam to join its own case against China
 at the United Nations Law of the Sea Tribunal. Hanoi chose not to 
participate at that time. But on May 14, two weeks after Beijing parked 
the drill rig offshore, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung told 
newswires that his government is contemplating legal action. Late in 
July, the Ho Chi Minh City Law University convened a high-profile 
conference at the government’s request to recommend legal strategies.
Second,
 Vietnam is likely to forge a more intimate diplomatic and military 
relationship with the United States -- not a formal alliance but a 
partnership based on a common interest in preventing Chinese hegemony in
 the South China Sea. Pham Binh Minh, who serves as Vietnam’s foreign 
minister and one of its four deputy prime ministers, will be the central
 figure in these efforts. Several days after China deployed its oil rig,
 U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry invited Minh to visit Washington. 
That trip will take place in late September.
In advance of
 Minh's trip, Evan Medeiros, senior director for Asian affairs on the 
U.S. National Security Council, paid a quiet visit to Hanoi in late 
July. Medeiros was followed immediately by U.S. Senators John McCain and
 Sheldon Whitehouse, and two weeks later by General Martin Dempsey, 
chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, whose four-day visit earned 
heavy coverage by Vietnamese media. Both McCain and Dempsey dropped 
broad hints that Washington is primed to relax its existing ban on 
transfers of lethal weapons to the Vietnamese military. Both mentioned 
the need to enhance Vietnam's “maritime domain awareness."
Some
 observers have argued that, by politically distancing itself from 
Beijing, Vietnam could instigate an economic war with China that it 
can’t afford to wage. But such fears are overblown. Vietnam exports 
coal, oil, timber, and agricultural products to China and imports 
machinery and cheap consumer goods; that part of the bilateral trading 
relationship trade is not only roughly balanced, but both countries can 
also readily find other markets for those wares. If there's a problem, 
it lies in the electronic parts, textiles, zippers, buttons, and shoe 
parts that are sent to Vietnam from China for assembly and re-export: 
although these imports create a huge deficit for Hanoi, they are more 
than offset by Vietnam's sales of finished wearables and digital gadgets
 to Europe, Japan, the United States, and elsewhere in the world. It could take a year or two to reestablish these value chains if China is angry enough to sever them.
But
 here again, the United States seems to offer a potential refuge: the 
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade pact, a negotiation that Vietnam 
joined in 2009. Vietnam is the least-developed of the 12 TPP negotiating
 partners and stands to see its exports leap by a third if the pact goes
 into effect. Anticipating provisions in the pact that will privilege 
garments made entirely in TPP member countries, Chinese, South Korean, 
Taiwanese and Vietnamese firms are building Vietnam's capacity to source
 inputs for garments and footwear at home.
Hanoi wants the
 United States to agree to lift its ban on lethal weapons sales, a step 
that Washington has conditioned on Hanoi's improving its treatment of 
political dissidents. For both governments, it's a matter of principle. 
There is a yawning gap between the United States’ insistence that the 
Vietnamese regime respect fundamental political rights and Vietnamese 
Communist leaders' belief that tolerating agitation for democracy poses 
an existential threat to their system.
On this matter of 
political freedoms, Hanoi, Washington, or both must compromise if they 
are to move ahead, but neither country has much room for maneuver. Many 
members of Congress will be wary of embracing Hanoi, even if they 
acknowledge that forestalling China’s regional hegemony is in both 
countries’ interest. For its part, the Vietnamese Politburo's vision of 
political order has limited its ability to compromise on human rights. 
And yet, if Hanoi cannot pledge to open up the sphere of political 
participation, or Washington cannot take a longer view, the 
long-discussed strategic relationship will still be beyond reach.
It's
 a tough call for the Obama administration. In the South China Sea, 
Beijing is no longer "peacefully rising" -- instead, it has become the 
neighborhood bully. Vietnam, as distasteful as its politics may often 
be, is the only country in Southeast Asia both able and, if properly 
encouraged, willing to resist the Chinese juggernaut.
 
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