As U.S. goes quiet on close naval
patrols, China speaks out
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[January 23, 2018]
By Greg Torode and Philip Wen
HONG KONG/BEIJING (Reuters) - While the
Pentagon plays down patrols close to Chinese-controlled reefs and
islands in the South China Sea, Beijing is sounding the alarm about
them, seeking to justify what experts say will be an even greater
presence in the disputed region.
Chinese officials publicized the latest U.S. "freedom of navigation
patrol", protesting the deployment last week of the destroyer USS Hopper
to within 12 nautical miles of Scarborough Shoal, an atoll west of the
Philippines which Beijing disputes with Manila.
It was the second time in recent months that confirmation of a patrol
came from Beijing, not Washington, which had previously announced or
leaked details.
Bonnie Glaser, a security expert at Washington's Center for Strategic
and International Studies, said while the administration of U.S.
President Donald Trump had a policy of keeping the patrols regular but
low key, China was willing to publicly exploit them to further their
military ends.
"It is difficult to conclude otherwise," she said. "Even as it pushes
ahead with these (patrols), I don't think the Trump administration has
really come to terms with what it will tolerate from China in the South
China Sea, and what it simply won't accept, and Beijing seems to grasp
this."
In official statements, Chinese foreign ministry official Lu Kang said
China would take "necessary measures to firmly safeguard its
sovereignty" in the resource-rich sea.
Some regional diplomats and security analysts believe that will involve
increased Chinese deployments and the quicker militarization of China's
expanded facilities across the Spratlys archipelago.
While U.S. officials did not target China in their comments, couching
freedom-of-navigation patrols as a "routine" assertions of international
law, Beijing was quick to cast Washington as the provocateur.
The Communist Party's official People's Daily newspaper on Monday
accused the U.S. of upsetting recent peace and co-operation and
"wantonly provoking trouble", saying China had must now strengthen its
presence in the strategic waterway.
CONSTRUCTION AND MILITARIZATION
In recent years, China has built up several reefs and islets into
large-scale airstrips and bases as it seeks to assert and enforce its
claims to much of the sea, through which some $3 trillion in trade
passes annually. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei, as well
as Taiwan, hold rival claims.
Chinese coastguard and People's Liberation Army navy ships patrol vast
swathes of the South China Sea, routinely shadowing U.S. and other
international naval deployments, regional naval officers say.
Zhang Baohui, a mainland security analyst at Hong Kong's Lingnan
University, told Reuters he believed Beijing was rattled by Trump's
sharpening Asia strategy and they might be tempted to react in the South
China Sea, even after months of relative calm.
"We can perhaps expect the Chinese to push ahead with militarization as
retaliation," he said.
A new U.S. national defense strategy unveiled last week stressed the
need to counter the rising authoritarian powers of China and Russia,
outlining a need to better support allies and newer partners against
coercion.
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An aerial photo taken though a glass window of a Philippine military
plane shows the alleged on-going land reclamation by China on
Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, west of
Palawan, Philippines, May 11, 2015. REUTERS/Ritchie B.
Tongo/Pool/File Photo
While most analysts and regional envoys believe China remains keen
to avoid an actual conflict with the significantly more powerful
U.S. navy in the South China Sea, it is working to close the gap.
China has added bunkers, hangars and advanced radars on its new
runways in the Spratlys, although it has not fully equipped them
with the advanced surface-to-air and anti-ship missiles they use to
protect the Paracels grouping further north.
Similarly, Beijing has yet to land jet fighters in the Spratlys -
test flights some experts are expecting this year.
POTENTIAL FLASHPOINT
The latest patrol was at least the fifth such patrol under the Trump
administration and the first to Scarborough - one of the more
contentious features in the region.
Scarborough, once a U.S. bombing range, was blockaded by the Chinese
in 2012, prompting the Philippines to launch its successful legal
case in the Hague against China's excessive territorial claims.
China allowed Filipino fishermen back to Scarborough's rich waters
last year, but it remains a potential flashpoint as both sides claim
sovereignty and China maintains a steady presence of ships nearby.
While experts and regional envoys expect China to ramp up operations
from the Spratlys, none expect it to build on Scarborough -
something widely believed to be a red line that would provoke the
United States, given its long-standing security treaty with the
Philippines.
Shi Yinhong, who heads the Center for American Studies at Beijing's
Renmin University, said China had "lived with" U.S. patrols for
several years but the key facts on the ground remained in China's
favor and broader tensions had "improved remarkably".
"These islands, especially those with reclaimed land and military
capability already deployed, they're still in Chinese hands," Shi,
who has advised the Chinese government on diplomacy, told Reuters.
"I don't think Trump has the stomach and the guts to change this
fundamental status quo."
(This story has been refiled to correct typo in paragraph 5)
(Reporting By Greg Torode in Hong Kong and Philip Wen in Beijing;
Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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