Chinese Strategy
Against the Northern Steppe, c.600BC to 90AD
Introduction
This video will
cover the strategies adopted by the early Chinese states against semi-settled
or nomadic peoples in the northern steppes, culminating in the 300-year-long
struggle between the Chinese Han Dynasty and the nomadic Xiongnu Empire. As the
opening act to two thousand years of competition, what Chinese leaders did here
influenced future policymakers and as such forms part of China’s strategic DNA.
Geography
The East
Asian steppe, consisting of the grasslands of modern Manchuria, Outer and Inner
Mongolia and northern Xinjiang, is part of a larger belt that stretches all the
way to Europe. Nomad-friendly pasture was located in northern Xinjiang, Outer
Mongolia, eastern Inner Mongolia, and the Ordos-Ningxia region enclosed by the
bend of the Yellow River. On the other side, settled states had to take into
account the 15-inch isohyet, which marks the minimum annual rainfall required
for sustained agriculture. Operations and garrisons beyond the line would have
to be sustained either by microclimates like oases, or by provisioning from
bases: even with this, a typical Chinese army of the time could only campaign
for around 100 days.
I. Eastern Zhou (c.600BC to 400BC): Dealing
with Semi-Settled Peoples
Nomadism
first emerged in 1000BC, but for a long time afterwards Chinese states still
dealt primarily with semi-settled peoples who, by not accepting the ruling Zhōu
Dynasty’s authority, were considered uncivilized. Grouped under the general
terms of ‘Róng’ and ‘Dí’, such peoples lived on marginal lands in small,
scattered groups, and as such were vulnerable to external pressure.
China at
this time was divided into hundreds of feudal states, all acknowledging the
Zhou King’s moral authority but otherwise fighting each other for survival and
power. Under these circumstances, winning meant gathering and utilizing
resources in a way superior to one’s rivals, meaning other Chinese states. To
achieve this, Chinese states could choose between two strategic directions:
either go to war and capture more resources; or seek peace and attempt to
extract more resources out of existing territory. War was the more
straightforward option, but the most successful states based themselves on realpolitik principles: war when the
risks were low and the potential profit high, and peace when the opposite was
the case.
Therefore,
there was no Chinese strategy against the Rong and Di per se. Rather, there was a general Chinese strategy against other
Chinese states, of which the Rong and Di inevitably played a part. This ‘part’
saw Rong and Di as potential resources and
also as minor enemies whose hostility could nevertheless tip the balance in
favor of one’s Chinese rivals. Realpolitik
as it pertained to Rong and Di was not just a question of how many resources
they had and how easy it was to conquer them, but also whether warring with
them would expose vulnerabilities to a Chinese rival, and whether there were
easier ways to utilize Rong and Di resources to strengthen oneself, for
example, by allying with a Rong state and using their army to deter or crush
said rival.
Out of these
considerations emerged a situation where Chinese states did fight with and
annex Rong and Di, but they also just as easily made treaties, intermarried,
and took each other’s concerns into account when executing policy. In other
words, there was no cultural norm barring Chinese states from such activity,
only the concerns of realpolitik. For
all intents and purposes, Rong and Di were just treated like any other minor
Chinese statelet of the time.
With one
major exception: being outside of the Zhou orbit, Rong and Di were not subject
to the same level of diplomatic respect as Chinese states under the Zhou king
were. A Chinese state fighting a Rong or Di state did not need to justify
himself to the Zhou king, it could break treaties made with them without
incurring official sanctions, and it could annex them without generating major
blowback from the Zhou King, who could theoretically demand military support
from his Chinese vassals. The risks of fighting Rong and Di was therefore
always lower than that of minor Chinese states, making the former easier
targets. By 400BC most Rong and Di had been annexed into one Chinese state or
another.
II. Warring States and Qin (400BC to
200BC): First Contact with Nomads
With the
absorption of Rong and Di territory, Chinese states now came into contact with
steppe nomads, grouped under the term Hú.
At this time nomads were still scattered, small-scale entities, too weak to
merit specific attention and so Chinese states’ strategy against other Chinese
states remained the main determinant for their attitudes towards the nomads.
A new
dynamic was introduced into Chinese-nomad relations, however, when the state of
Zhào established a cavalry arm in 307BC modeled on nomadic traditions. Its
value in war was quickly proven and soon all Chinese states were seeking horses
and pasture for their own cavalry. At the same time, cavalry allowed Chinese
states to approximate the mobility and operational depth of nomads, making
conquest of the nearby steppe a real possibility. As a result, in order to keep
up with each other cavalry-wise, Chinese states almost immediately began conducting
major offensives against the nomads, eventually seizing large swathes of the
steppe.
Now the
question became: how to defend and make these new territories productive
without tying down the cavalry needed back in China proper? Diplomacy was of
limited value against disorganized and migratory nomads; instead, the response
came in the form of ‘long walls’, which were systems of watchtowers, beacons,
forts and physical defenses running along favorable terrain, chokepoints and key
routes. Operationally, the creation of signaling and logistics infrastructure
gave slower garrisoning infantry a chance at concentrating against nomadic
incursions; strategically, not only did they block hostile elements from
disrupting horse production, they also channeled the movement of people and
goods and subjected them to state authority, important since ‘long walls’ were
built in non-Chinese areas whose nomadic inhabitants had little in common with
their new overlords.
Contrary to
use of the concept in later dynasties, ‘Long Walls’ formed part of a broad
Chinese offensive into nomadic
territory, stabilizing conquered pasture for horse production and serving as a
springboard for further advances, should the demand for cavalry grow strong
enough. This dynamic reached its apex after the unification of China under Qín
in 221BC, who joined the ‘Long Walls’ into a Great Wall and then launched an
offensive in 215BC to clear out the Ordos pasture and anchor the Empire’s
border at what must have seemed like a ‘natural line of defense’ along the
Yellow River. The expedition was a complete operational success, but in hindsight
could only be seen as a major strategic mistake. The loss of so much pasture
destabilized nomadic society and pushed it into extended crisis, out of which
emerged a peer competitor that would haunt China for centuries.
III. Early Western Han (200BC to 130BC): The
Heqin Strategy
In ‘typical’
nomadic society where domestically-produced economic surplus is low, there is
little room to support non-producers like full-time soldiers. In ‘crisis’
situations, however, desperate nomads are incentivized to leverage their unique
martial talents to seize surplus and tribute from others, becoming roving
armies where all adult males turn into professional soldiers. Coordination and
supply of such soldiers, in turn, stimulates the creation of hierarchies,
central government, and imperial administration, laying down the framework for
a permanent nomadic empire.
The
cumulative effect of Chinese encroachment and especially the Qin’s offensive
may have been the direct catalyst for the nomadic ‘crisis’ situation that ended
with the founding of the Xiōngnú Empire in 209BC, which, thanks to the dynamics
of nomad expansion – successful warlords attracting tribes which in turn add to
military strength – now posed a systemic threat to the new Hàn Dynasty from
Manchuria to Gansu and beyond, including recovered lands in the Ordos barely
100 miles from the Han capital, Cháng'ān.
The Han
army, weakened by fighting the post-Qin civil war, the granting of territories
to vassal-kings, and the loss of pasture, was in no shape to pursue a military
strategy against the organized Xiongnu, and an attempted offensive resulted in
the Emperor’s defeat and near-capture in 200BC.
As a result,
the Han proposed the first of several héqīn
or ‘marriage alliance’ efforts between the Han and Xiongnu. Recognizing the
Xiongnu as equals with their own sphere of influence, the Han would pay tribute
as the price for peace at the border. Furthermore, the agreement would be
sealed through a Han princess marrying the Xiongnu chányú or his son.
Traditional
historiography has castigated heqin
as appeasement at best and kowtowing to barbarians at worst, but the practice
can be seen as the Han’s two-pronged strategy to manage the Xiongnu threat. The
first prong continues the pedigree of Chinese realpolitik where states alternate between war and peace based on
their own strength, enemy consideration, and the cost-benefit analysis of
fighting.
The key was
in identifying who was the primary threat to the Han – and it was likely not the Xiongnu, who had a vested
interest in keeping their tributary golden goose alive. Instead, the threat
came from the Han’s vassal-kings, who ruled autonomous territories in half the
Empire, had their own armies, and harbored designs on independence or the
imperial throne. As referenced in the previous section regarding Rong and Di,
the strategic question was not merely whether the Han was strong enough to
defeat the Xiongnu, but whether in the process of fighting them, the Han would
expose itself to a potential strike from its vassals, which given the
tremendous expense of a Xiongnu war, was certainly ‘yes’. There was also the
question of whether the Han could utilize the Xiongnu alliance against the
vassal-kings, which was more ambiguous: in the end, however, the Xiongnu did
not decisively intervene in favor of rebellious vassals as they did prior to heqin, which meant that the Han could neutralize
the kings as a viable threat by 154BC. By allying with the enemy whose conquest
was riskier and less profitable, the Han could therefore focus on the easier
and richer enemy, capturing resources that would eventually be turned on the
Xiongnu.
The second
prong of heqin stems from the Chinese
tradition of assessing and manipulating political and cultural institutions as
part of a broader strategy. Despite its apparent unity, large parts of the
Xiongnu Empire were still governed by autonomous kings who raided the Han
regardless of sanction from the Xiongnu chanyu.
The Han could have conducted heqin
with these kings – but instead, it dealt with the Xiongnu leader and his central
government, in the hopes of cementing the chanyu’s
role as the chief conduit for tribute and thus giving him the leverage to
impose his will on the Xiongnu. This was the same chanyu, in addition, whose person and clan would also be exposed to
regular infusions of Han blood and culture. Heqin
did not just seek to delay war, it also sought to neutralize the Xiongnu as
a threat long-term by at least reducing the cultural distance between the
nomads and China, if not outright assimilating the former.
But if the heqin strategy took into account Xiongnu
political and cultural cultures, it failed or was unwilling to understand
Xiongnu political norms, which was to be the strategy’s undoing. The Han
expected absolute peace in return for tribute, but this assumed a powerful chanyu not just able, but willing to
restrain his subjects forever. This was unrealistic given the norms that regulated
Xiongnu politics: regular policy consultation with vassal lords, a system where
said lords decided succession amongst the males of the royal family, and the
need for the same lords to demonstrate divine favor through martial feats.
Enforcing a concrete ban on China raids, no matter how powerful the chanyu, would have dealt a severe blow
to his authority and invited usurpers who promised otherwise. The terms of heqin, or the Han interpretation of said
terms, was simply unachievable to begin with.
So Xiongnu
raids continued, seemingly piling further humiliation onto Emperors already
humiliated by their admissions of equality with the chanyu. And with the vassal-kings gone and no other overt threats
to the Han on the horizon, the one argument that heqin defenders had left – that a Xiongnu war would be immensely
costly – was slowly losing its persuasiveness.
IV. Mid Western Han (140BC – 80BC): Offense
Under Emperor Wu
The
accession of Emperor Wǔ of Han in 141BC marked a shift in Han strategy towards
war with the Xiongnu in order to secure the northern border. Heqin had not produced satisfactory
results for the Han, which had used the years of peace to eliminate the
vassal-kings, grow the economy and reconstitute a cavalry force capable of long-distance
operations. Everything was ready save for the key question to the whole
enterprise: what objective would ‘secure the northern border’?
Initially,
the Han took a geographic view of the problem: securing the northern border
meant pushing the Xiongnu away from the border. As a concession to fiscal
conservatives, the Han first tried a small ambush to capture the chanyu which failed, and from 133-119BC
annual campaigns against the Xiongnu, which saw the Han commit tens of
thousands of cavalry against enemy forces magnitudes smaller in size, sought to
drive out hostile elements, demonstrate Han sovereignty and carve out periods
of relative security in order to lay the groundwork for administrative control
– from outer to inner frontier: buffer states ruled by surrendered nomads;
outposts, defensive lines and military colonies guarding key routes; and
finally commanderies serving as administrative, logistic and production bases.
These efforts, consuming almost all of the state’s fiscal reserves and annual revenue,
successfully denied the Xiongnu staying power south of the Gobi and forced the chanyu to relocate to Outer Mongolia,
and even there he was occasionally raided by generals such as Huò Qùbìng. What
they did not prevent were large-scale Xiongnu incursions into the north, which
occurred with almost annual regularity.
In response,
the Han began to consider ways in which the Xiongnu’s offensive capability
could be eliminated; the other side of this was significant ‘mission creep’
where ‘security for the northern border’ demanded ever-larger commitments from
the Han and the Han economy.
In 138BC, a
few years before the commencement of official hostilities, the Han sent Zhāng
Qiān on a westward mission to find allies that would outflank the Xiongnu.
Zhang returned in 125BC without success but with valuable intelligence on the
Xiongnu Empire. As a state comprised of non-productive soldiery, the loss of
tribute from the Han ought to have caused the Xiongnu to disintegrate, but that
did not happen; Zhang’s report that the cities of the Tarim Basin all paid
tribute to the Xiongnu provided the answer to this mystery. Han now saw in a
westward expedition the potential to ‘sever the Xiongnu’s right arm’ and began
the preliminary to a new campaign by opening of the Héxī Corridor through oasis
forts and colonial garrisons, a task that consumed Han energies and revenue
from 119 to 104BC.
The campaign
to secure the Tarim Basin under Han hegemony initially involved far-ranging ‘show
the flag’ campaigns stretching to Ferghana in modern Uzbekistan. In response,
the Xiongnu attacked the new Han territories, and the Han replied by sending
several armies against the Xiongnu’s regional power base in northern Xinjiang
and Mongolia, all ending in abject failure and stalemate. In any case, the
establishment and maturation of Han garrisons along the Hexi Corridor were to
have the greater effect on the Tarim Basin, as not only did they provide bases
from which the Han could begin to militarily and diplomatically erode Xiongnu
hegemony, they also stimulated the creation of the Silk Road and further
influenced the Tarim towards the Han. By 60BC, Han was secure enough in its
hegemony that an official policy coordinator for the Han in the region –
Protector-General of the Western Regions – was established.
The gradual
loss of the Tarim was a mortal blow to the Xiongnu which, cut off from major
sources of tribute, now began to lose cohesion. Major incursions became a thing
of the past as Xiongnu lords began fighting each other, and even as an
exhausted Han court ended major offensive operations after the death of Emperor
Wu, the disintegration of the Xiongnu continued, speeded along by targeted
subsidies and heqin offers to
defecting lords.
Under the
54-year reign of Emperor Wu, the Han finally secured the northern border from
the threat of the Xiongnu. The success of the military option does not
invalidate heqin, which was a
strategy that worked – insofar as the Xiongnu Empire did not pre-empt the
growing danger posed by the Han – given the circumstances of the time. One must
also note that if wresting the Tarim away from Xiongnu hegemony was the
decisive action that secured Han victory, then the initial drive north –
including the celebrated campaigns of Wèi Qīng and Huò Qùbìng – might have
actually been of little strategic value. Patience and better intelligence might
have saved the Han a monstrous expense, no small point as Emperor Wu’s heavy
expenditure could only be financed by state monopolies, the selling of imperial
offices, and heavy taxes on economic productivity. Not only did these changes
encourage corruption and administrative decay, but also promoted the
landholding aristocracy at the expense of the central government, a feature of
Chinese regimes for the next thousand years.
V. Late Western and Eastern Han (80BC –
90AD): Failing to Structure a Peace
The physical
conquests of Emperor Wu proved to be temporary. The Han entered into
administrative decline and eventually yielded to the Xīn Dynasty in 9AD, and by
the time a renewed Eastern Han had time to review the northern situation in 48,
the boundary, with the exception of the Hexi Corridor, had largely fallen back
to its pre-war state. The Xiongnu had recovered its hegemony in the Western
Regions, but this had come too late to prevent the split between Northern and
Southern Xiongnu in 48 AD, the result of political rivalries stemming from
Emperor Wu’s offensives. Both sides now appealed to the Han for an alliance.
The Han was
in sight of their ideal strategic environment: two nomadic confederations,
strong enough to police themselves while fearful enough of the Han that they
would do so. The problem, of course, was that the Han could not ally with both
sides at once and was certainly not interested in reuniting the old Xiongnu
Empire. Ultimately, the Han attempted to square the circle by adopting an
ambiguous policy: vassalizing and subsidizing the Southern Xiongnu as a buffer
state, while making no real attempt to assist the latter in overthrowing the
Northern Xiongnu.
Initial
Northern Xiongnu displeasure with this arrangement was quickly made irrelevant
by the Han recovery of the Western Regions from 70 to 90, and the generous
bounties offered to the Southern Xiongnu and other nomads for Northern Xiongnu
heads. By 83 the ideal strategic environment finally arrived, with the
desperate Northern Xiongnu offering terms of surrender.
But at this
moment of triumph, everything unraveled for the Han. Its ambiguous nomadic policy
now came back to bite it: the Southern Xiongnu, fearful that a permanent
settlement would mean an end to both Han subsidies and its own dreams of
unification, began aggressive operations against the Northern Xiongnu, wrecking
Han hopes for peace. In 89, the Southern Xiongnu even proposed a joint invasion
of the Northern Xiongnu, and the Han, seemingly unconcerned that its policy was
now being led around by the whims of a vassal, agreed.
The outcome
of the joint attack against the Northern Xiongnu was never in doubt, with the
Northern chanyu fleeing to Central
Asia with the remnants of his state. But once again, a Chinese state’s
operational success would bring about major strategic failure. The Han
entrusted the conquered territory to the Southern Xiongnu, who proved incapable
of ruling over their mortal enemies. Almost immediately they began losing
ground to Xiānbēi nomads, who by the 120s onwards were again invading Han
territory as leaders of an Empire even larger than that of the Xiongnu.
The Han now
foreshadowed the fate of Rome, with alternating invasions by Xianbei and the
Tibetan Qiāng, depopulation of core regions and the rise of Han led, nomad-run armies,
and finally general societal collapse during the Three Kingdoms. The Xiongnu
ultimately got some revenge on Han when they captured Chang’an in 316,
overthrew the Western Jin Dynasty, and briefly ruled Northeastern China as the
Former Zhao.
Conclusion
The earliest
Chinese states saw the steppe peoples as resources in a broader struggle
against Chinese rivals. Strategy-wise they allied and warred according to the
demands of realpolitik, but such an
attitude became less practical as the Chinese engaged with nomads less amenable
to diplomacy and who, in any case, could only expect long-term hostility as
inter-Chinese competition demanded the seizure of ever-more horses and pasture.
This culminated in the creation of the Xiongnu Empire whose systemic threat was
first neutralized by the Han’s heqin strategy,
then eliminated entirely through the capture of their tributary bases. Twice in
victory, however, the Han failed to structure their hard-won strategic
circumstances into a more permanent settlement: first by permitting the slow
decay of their position, and second by allowing policy to be driven by client
needs. The Han would not get a third chance.
Ultimately,
this opening act of Chinese strategic history would generate and reinforce many
of the tropes that inform Chinese strategymaking to this day. From Northern Qí’s
use of a Great Wall, to neo-Confucian revulsion over heqin, and even modern China’s strategy, whose so-called
‘tributary’ nature the strategist Edward Luttwak sees as stemming from the
Han-Xiongnu struggle, the various policies and strategems developed here by leaders
deserve as much attention and research as the abstract sentences of Sun Tzu.
Thanks for
watching the video!
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