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High stakes and rising tension in the South China Sea
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Determined to wrest maximum advantage in the next three to
five years that it perceives as its window of strategic opportunity,
China is unyielding in efforts to push the envelope for recovering its
claimed maritime territories. Tension in the South China Sea and
Asia-Pacific region has consequently increased, as has angry rhetoric.
In addition to enacting domestic legislation to reinforce
claims, China has recently adopted a more assertive stance. Armed
vessels of China’s State Oceanic Administration ended a two month-long
stand-off with Philippine Navy vessels around Scarborough Reef this
June. Later China flexed economic muscle jeopardising 200,000 jobs in
the Philippines by banning the import of fruits. Chinese tour operators
were instructed not to take groups to the Philippines. Philippines was
compelled to back off, but there has been angry, though helpless,
domestic reaction. Relations with Vietnam simultaneously got
strained with Beijing objecting to Vietnamese fishermen trawling in what
it claims are its territorial waters. Beijing additionally objected to
Hanoi auctioning off-shore oil and natural gas blocks, situated in
disputed waters, to foreign oil companies. It warned that it will take
concrete steps to prevent such off-shore exploration. The commercial
agreement between Vietnam and India’s ONGC to explore a block in these
waters and presence of ONGC’s survey ship provided Beijing a pretext for
singling India out for warnings. Meanwhile, official Chinese media
articles accuse the Philippines and Vietnam of being in the”forefront”
in “stirring” trouble and are urging a “counter-attack” against them. The
ASEAN Summit in Pnom Penh also closed in mid-June 2012 without, for the
first time in its 45 year history, issuing a joint communiqué. China
strong-armed Cambodia into disallowing other countries from presenting
their arguments after Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi declared
there was “no dispute” about China’s sovereignty over the reef. He
warned “China hopes the Philippine side faces the facts squarely and
stops creating trouble”. Cambodia’s ready susceptibility to Chinese
pressure is because of huge loans granted by China.
Beijing has
ratcheted pressure on other nations that dispute Chinese claims. Last
month it sent 300 fishermen supported by China’s People’s Liberation
Army Navy (PLAN) ships to waters also claimed by the Philippines. To
consolidate possession, Beijing initiated administrative measures. On
July 18, it established Sansha Prefecture exercising administrative
jurisdiction over the disputed Spratly and Paracels Archipelagos and
Macclesfield Bank. A military garrison was also established. Roads and
low cost housing are being built and provision made for electricity and
water for residents of Woody Island. The measures underscore Beijing’s
plans to successively occupy and consolidate possession of the disputed
islands in the South China Sea. Beijing assesses that US will not
confront China militarily.
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The change in policy was hinted at during the World Peace
Forum in Beijing this June. Retired PLA Major General Luo Yuan, who is
Vice President of the China Strategy Culture Promotion Association,
argued that “China’s patience has been tested to its limits, and there
is no room for further tolerance.” Cui Liru, President of the China
Institute of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR), which is
affiliated to the Ministry of State Security, said Beijing had
previously focused too much on shelving disputes and seeking common
ground with neighbours. “We have come to realise that perhaps we need to
do more in terms of demonstrating China’s sovereignty.”
In a
press statement issued on August 3, Washington finally took note of
China’s actions, particularly its use of “coercive economic action” and
establishment of the administrative prefecture and military garrison. It
urged finalisation of a comprehensive Code of Conduct and peaceful
resolution of disputes.
In a sharp, swift response China’s
foreign ministry spokesperson the following day expressed “firm
opposition” to the US statement. The US, he said, had “totally
disregarded” facts, “confounded right and wrong, and sent a seriously
wrong message…not conducive to peace and stability in the South China
Sea and Asia-Pacific region.” Reiterating China’s “indisputable
sovereignty” over these islands and waters, it justified establishment
of the administrative prefecture and military garrison as “well within
its sovereign rights.” The US deputy chief of mission was summoned to
the foreign ministry.
In an unrelated demonstration of PLAN’s
operational reach expanding into Europe and potential influence of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), early this month a Type 052
destroyer, Type 054A frigate, and an auxiliary oil ship entered the
Mediterranean en route to the Syrian coast for possible naval
manoeuvres. Russia, another SCO member, last month dispatched 11
warships to the eastern Mediterranean in the largest display of Russian
military power in the region since the Syrian conflict commenced.
The
stakes in the South China Sea have been raised and tension is set to
escalate. India too could find itself being drawn in to the dispute.
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