I think if you wish to argue whether it is conceivable that a weaker party may provoke possibly a stronger party, that argument is sustainable within reasons. However given the background between the two nations economically and militarily it is less likely and that would be my position. Considering that the nature of the provocation is that the Philippines filed for arbitration and in return China went on one of the largest land reclamation known to-date, doesn't suggest in my view simply a provoked response but rather an excuse for a larger plan. This point I had previously laboured on and will not repeat. You than overlapped the whole argument with the notion that China is merely a victim makes the whole story rather incredulous.
In this specific discussion with nfgc I never said that China was "merely the victim", and I was not using the analogy to describe the specific SCS.
I was just saying that it is not inconceivable for a weaker party to provoke a stronger party, to counter the belief of nfgc that a weaker party can never provoke a stronger party because of their difference in strength.
It is a legally established convention under law of armed conflict that any nation can invoke self defence in retaliation. However the caveat is proportionality and hence size of response matters in the whole conversation. The massive land reclamation in response to filing for legal arbitration doesn't in my view pass the proportionate response test no matter how you wish to present your argument.
As I've repeated, my discussion with nfgc specifically in the last few replies were only related to his belief that a weaker party can never provoke a stronger one simply on the basis of their difference in strength.
I deliberately try to keep my statements limited in scope to avoid a discussion spiralling out of control, and in this case I've repeated myself enough to say that I'm only speaking in regards to the principle of whether it is conceivable for a weaker party to provoke a stronger party.
Reasonableness and fairness matters in the modern era of rule of law. I can understand that in the imperial dynasties, royal degree by fiat defines the environment but the SCS countries are not vassal states and China is part of the global community.
Well it is a good thing that I never said that reasonable and fairness didn't matter -- I simply said that it was another matter separate to the topic of discussion I was having with nfgc around the notion that no weaker party is ever able to provoke a stronger party only because of the difference in strength.
This entire vein of discussion can basically be distilled down to one question: is it conceivable for a weaker party to provoke a stronger party?
If you agree yes, then that is the only answer I need.
And before you talk about context, or the specifics of the SCS dispute, note that I've never tried to apply the weak party/strong party provocation principle onto the SCS dispute, and I've never said that we should never look at the context, history, and details of a situation either (in fact I think those are all important things to consider)... I'm only saying that nfgc's statement as I perceive it, is illogical.
Nfgc has in effect said "X event can never happen" (with X event being a weaker party provoking a stronger party). I am saying "actually, there are circumstances in which X event can happen".
If we were to represent these with numbers, nfgc is basically saying the probability of X occurring is 0, while I am saying it is greater than 0.
Alternatively nfgc's statements could also be perceived as "Y has an inverse relationship with X and that this relationship is the strongest and/or only determinant of Y" (with Y being the degree of provocation perceived by a stronger party, and X being the difference in strength between the strong and weak party). In which case my position is that context, history, and other factors all play a significant part for determining the value of Y, and X has only a small effect on Y, if any at all.