Monday, October 26, 2015

U.S. warship sails near islands claimed by China

JapanToday

U.S. warship sails near islands claimed by China
AFP

U.S. warship sails near islands claimed by China

WASHINGTON —

A U.S. warship on Tuesday sailed close to artificial islands Beijing is building in the South China Sea, a US defense official said, in a move likely to infuriate the rising Asian power.

The USS Lassen passed within 12 nautical miles of at least one of the land formations Beijing claims in the disputed Spratly Islands, the official told AFP.

Under international law, a state’s territorial waters extend 12 nautical miles from its shore. However, the U.S. and others argue that this rule cannot apply to artificial islands.

The move is a significant escalation of the dispute over the strategically vital South China Sea, which Beijing claims almost in its entirety, even waters close to the coasts of other states.

Several neighboring countries including the Philippines, a U.S. ally, have competing sovereignty claims and the dispute has raised fears of clashes in an area that includes shipping lanes crucial to world trade.

“We are conducting routine operations in the South China Sea in accordance with international law,” the official said. “We will fly, sail, and operate anywhere in the world that international law allows.”

Tensions have mounted since China transformed reefs in the area into small islands capable of supporting military facilities, a move the U.S. says threatens freedom of navigation.

The work has been seen as an attempt by Beijing to assert its claims by establishing physical facts in the water.

Tuesday’s exercise came as China’s Communist leaders held a sensitive policy meeting in the capital, but Foreign Minister Wang Yi provided a measured response to the news.

“If true, we advise the American side to think twice before acting, to not act rashly, and to not make trouble out of nothing,” the official Xinhua news agency quoted Wang as saying at a seminar.

The U.S., which is engaged in a foreign policy “pivot” to Asia, and China, which has the world’s largest military and is expanding the reach of its navy, are jockeying for position in the Pacific.

Beijing regularly calls for a “new model of major country relations”, implying equality between the world’s top two economic and military powers.

In September, five Chinese naval vessels sailed near the US Aleutian islands in the Bering Sea.

Beijing has repeatedly said that its South China Sea construction work is primarily for civilian purposes, and Chinese President Xi Jinping during a visit to Washington last month pledged that the country will not militarize the area.

But satellite images of the islands published by the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies show that Beijing has reclaimed millions of square meters of land in the Spratlys, known as Nansha in Chinese.

The pictures also show a host of facilities with the potential for military applications being developed, including as many as three runways, at least one of them 3,000 meters long.

Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam—members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)—also claim parts of the sea. Taiwan is a sixth claimant.

The U.S. official insisted that Tuesday’s freedom of navigation operations were “not directed at any specific country.”

“U.S. forces operate in the Asia-Pacific region on a daily basis, including in the South China Sea,” he added.

The exercise did not seem to have provoked a military response by Beijing, Andrew Erickson, an expert on Chinese maritime issues, told AFP, demonstrating that “China and the U.S. share an interest in keeping the South China Sea’s vital sea lanes stable and open.”

Earlier this month, an editorial in China’s Global Times newspaper, which is close to the ruling Communist party, condemned Washington’s “ceaseless provocations and coercion” in the South China Sea.

The People’s Liberation Army should use force if the United States “encroaches on China’s core interests”, it added.

The U.S. recognises the right of nations to send warships into another country’s territorial waters as long as they do not conduct any military or intelligence related activities, a concept known as “innocent passage”.

China, however, disputes this interpretation of international law, saying that naval vessels may not sail into its waters without express permission from Beijing.

© 2015 AFP

4 Comments

 
  •  

    Wakarimasen at Oct. 27, 2015 - 12:54PM JST

    Japan should send a ship too.

  •  

    Triring at Oct. 27, 2015 - 01:05PM JST

    Reclaimed land does not obtain EEZ and only 500m in terms of territorial water agreed in UNCLOS which PRC is also a Signatory of.

  •  

    Moonraker at Oct. 27, 2015 - 02:03PM JST

    It probably needs to be done. Sadly. China needs to be shown.

  •  

    CrazyJoe at Oct. 27, 2015 - 02:33PM JST

    Upon being notified of the mission having been completed, Obama proudly paraded around the White House grounds poking a stick at hornet nests demanding they build elsewhere.

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