"China’s Global Maritime Access" - By CWP Alum Isaac B. Kardon

October 31, 2022

China lacks the network of foreign military bases that typically attends great-power expansion, yet its armed forces operate at an increasingly global scale. How has the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) managed this feat without a significant footprint on foreign soil? Why has Chinese leadership not (yet) established a network of bases to address security threats to China’s overseas interests? This article analyzes the structural constraints facing China’s military basing abroad and then examines the methods by which the PLA has nonetheless achieved significant global power-projection capability. It highlights the capacity provided by international maritime transport infrastructure owned and operated by Chinese firms as a viable—yet limited—means of securing national interests overseas with military power. The study demonstrates that the structural setting and historical sequence of China’s rise render foreign military bases relatively costly, incentivizing alternative modes of access and power projection in the maritime domain.

China’s Global Maritime Access: Alternatives to Overseas Military Bases in the Twenty-First Century  - Isaac B. Kardon - Security Studies 31, no. 4 (2022)

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09636412.2022.2137429?journalCode=fsst20#.Y1vOxOQ32zQ.twitter


 

Isaac B. Kardon (孔适海) is assistant professor in the Center for Naval Warfare Studies at the Naval War College. He researches and writes on China's maritime disputes, China's global port development and overseas basing, and China-Pakistan relations. He teaches Chinese politics and foreign policy. Kardon's book, China's Law of the Sea: The New Rules of Maritime Order (Yale, 2023) tackles the question of whether and how China is "changing the rules" in the maritime domain. His work on ports appears in International Security, Security Studies, and the Naval War college Review. He studied Mandarin at Peking University, Tsinghua University, National Taiwan Normal University, and Hainan University.


Photo Credit: By Petty Officer 2nd Class Joshua Fulton - https://www.dvidshub.net/image/3210352/170307-n-ou129-157, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=56934243

Isaac B Kardon USNWC Headshot