Can a Bird Avert a War?
Short of
buying a 15-megaton thermal nuclear bomb from Russia and blowing up the
Senkaku/Daioyu islands (making sure that nothing remains above the water line
at low tide), is there any other way to defuse this escalating territorial
dispute that some observers worry could lead to war between China and Japan?
There
is, of course, an international mechanism specifically designed to arbitrate
just such disputes. Both Beijing and Tokyo could, in theory, bring the dispute
before an arbitration panel of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The
Hague. The trick is getting both sides to agree to arbitration. At the moment neither side is anywhere close to putting their claims in the hands of an impartial panel.
Officially, Tokyo does not admit that there is any dispute at all; Meanwhile, China describes the Senkaku as a “core interest,” in the same way as Tibet of Sinkiang, and one does not submit a “core interest” to the final arbitration of 15 disinterested judges or a committee of them.
Beijing
in particular would be loath to open this door, as it could easily apply to
other territorial disputes, especially in the South China Sea, where in late
March Manila appealed to the ICJ to rule on Beijing’s “nine-dash line” a series
of heavy dashes on official Chinese maps that make it appear that China is
claiming the entire South China Sea.
Tokyo is
more amenable to using the ICJ to mediate its dispute with Seoul over an island
group in the Sea of Japan known as the Dokdo to Koreans and Takeshima to Japan.
But here Japan has a relatively weak hand as South Korea has garrisoned the
tiny rocks since 1954 and has consistently rejected or ignored Tokyo’s appeals
for arbitration.
The
difficulty with taking cases to ICJ is one of the parties has to be prepared to
lose and accept the verdict, unless, as happens on some cases, it is possible
to split the differences. In this case the five Senkaku islets and adjacent
rocks do not lend themselves to being divvied up some way.
What
often happens is the losing party simply walks out on the court in a huff. That
is exactly what Colombia did in 2012, when the tribunal ruled in favor of
Nicaragua in a long-standing dispute over ownership of islands and mineral
rights in the Caribbean. Last November it recalled its ambassador.
Enter the Short-tailed Albatross.
This elegant sea bird was hunted almost to extinction in the late 19th and early twentieth centuries for their elegant feathers that were exported to Europe to decorate hats of stylish ladies. Much of the hunting was done on the Senkaku islands one of the places where the birds breed. That, of course, was when the island was still open to visitors.
The last
permanent inhabitants left the island and returned to Japan in the 1940s, shutting
down the only business enterprise on the islands, a processing plant for making
bonito flakes used in Japanese fish broth. At one time, the island boasted a
population of 248 people and even a school. Lack of fuel during the war (all
food and other supplies had to be imported by sea), made the business untenable:
the, owners sold out to a family that would later sell the island to the
national government.
Currently,
there are just two breeding places for the short-tailed albatross: Torishima island
in the Bonin chain south of Tokyo and on Mina-Kojima, one of the Senkaku
islands. Once nearing extinction, the short -tailed albatross is now protected
on Torishima and left to themselves on
the Senkaku.
The
Senkaku is also the apparent home, indeed the only home, of a rare rodent known
as the “Senkaku Mole” of which there is apparently only one picture in
existence.
Because
no one is allowed to land on the island, no scientist has been able to evaluate
the condition of the flora and fauna on the islands. Yoshihiko Yamada, a
professor of maritime issues at Tokai University, was part of a “survey” team
sent to investigate the condition of the islands in part to help put a price on
them while it was up for sale.
But he
and his colleagues had to do their surveying on board small ships and boats and
were not permitted to land. “Unless we start soon, it will be too late for us
to conserve the nature of the islands,” Yamada laments. The biggest ecological
threat to the islands, is the presence of goats that are overrunning the place.
Senkaku has become a kind of goat paradise with plenty to eat and no predators.
Two or
three obviously fertile goats were slipped onto the main island Uotsurishma in
1978 by a group of ultra-nationalist Japanese who evidently felt that there
should be some kind of living Japanese presence on the island so long as no
human beings were allowed to live there. They’ve grown to a herd of an estimated
300 goats.
What the
Senkaku needs more than activists who plant flags and then disappear, is a fulltime
game warden. There is a crying need to cull this herd before the creatures gnaw
their way through just about every living tree - either by exterminating them,
or, one might hope, corralling and repatriating the creatures back to Japan.
It is
hard to believe that the hard-nosed leaders in Beijing or Tokyo are likely to
get excited over preserving the Short-tailed Albatross, much less the elusive
Senkaku Mole, but they might be open to a face-saving solution in which no side
“wins” and no side “loses”.
Turn the
Senkaku into a bird sanctuary by selling it to some kind of conservation
foundation or putting them under the nominal control of an international
organization, while, in the meantime, the two countries, Japan and China put
their competing claims to sovereignty into deep freezer where they belong.