Chinese Riddle



The BBC reported the other day on China's ambitions in the South China Sea which seem to include laying claim to waters that are an awful lot closer to the borders of neighbouring countries including Malaysia, Philippines, Brunei and Vietnam. 

What I'd like to know is who drew the red lines on the map, far from China's borders? 

I suspect it was some reliable person from the central committee of the Chinese Communist Party.


China says US warship's Spratly islands passage 'illegal'

BBC China

Image copyright - Reuters Image caption - Guided-missile destroyer USS Lassen seen with a South Korean ship in a photo from March

Chinese officials have condemned a US ship's passage near disputed islands in the South China Sea as "illegal".

The guided-missile destroyer USS Lassen breached the 12-nautical mile zone China claims around Subi and Mischief reefs in the Spratly archipelago.

The freedom of navigation operation is a serious challenge to China's claims over the artificial islands.

Its foreign ministry said the ship had been warned and characterised the act as a "threat to China's sovereignty".

Lu Kang, the spokesman, added that Beijing would "resolutely respond to any country's deliberately provocative actions" and that the ship had been "tracked and warned" while on the mission to deliberately enter the disputed waters.

Meanwhile, US Defence Department spokesman Cdr Bill Urban said that "the United States is conducting routine operations in the South China Sea in accordance with international law".

The move was welcomed by several countries in the East Asia region, including the Philippines and Japan.

Dredging

China claims most of the South and East China seas. Other countries in South-East Asia have competing claims for the Spratly Islands, Paracel Islands and Scarborough Shoal, which are thought to have resource-rich waters around them.



The reefs, which were submerged, were turned into islands by China by a massive dredging project which began in late 2013.

China says this work is legal and in a meeting with US President Barack Obama last month in Washington, President Xi Jinping said China had "no intention to militarise" the islands.

But Washington believes Beijing is constructing military facilities, designed to reinforce its disputed claim to most of the region - a major shipping zone.

Image copyrightAFPImage captionA file photo from April shows what is claimed to be an airstrip under construction on the Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratly Islands

What is Freedom of Navigation?

The US Freedom of Navigation programme challenges what it deems to be "excessive claims" to the world's oceans and airspace.

It was developed to promote international adherence to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, even though the US has not formally ratified the treaty.

In 2013 and 2014, the US conducted Freedom of Navigation operations of different kinds against China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam - each of whom occupies territory in the South China Sea.

International maritime law allows countries to claim ownership of the 12-nautical mile area surrounding natural islands, but does not allow nations to claim ownership of submerged features that have been raised by human intervention.

US Defence Secretary Ash Carter had previously signalled plans for the sail-by, saying the US would "fly, sail and operate wherever international law allows".

A senior US defence official told Reuters news agency the warship began its mission early on Tuesday local time near the reefs and would spend several hours there.

The USS Lassen, a guided-missile destroyer, was expected to be accompanied by a US Navy P-8A surveillance plane and a P-3 surveillance plane, according to the unnamed official, speaking to US media.

Additional patrols could follow in the coming weeks, the official added.

Why build a series of tiny islands in the middle of a vast sea? - Celia Hatton, BBC News, Beijing

China has altered Asia's geography by dredging sand from the sea bottom and piling it on existing reefs to build several new islands.

Vague explanations have been offered to justify this costly exercise. Officially, the islands will be used for rescue operations and environmental projects.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has pledged the islands would not be "militarised".

However, many are sceptical of China's geopolitical aims. In recent years, China has amplified its claims in the South China Sea. Critics fear Beijing will use the islands' airstrips to exert control over the area.

At the same time, the United States is exerting its own influence in Asia, pivoting more of its military and economic attention to the region. The new islands are relatively tiny, but the tensions they could create between Beijing and Washington could have global implications.

USS Lassen
Image copyright - US Navy

The ship is an Arleigh Burke class missile destroyer, which the US Navy says is among the most powerful destroyers ever built.
  • It is 155m (509ft) long with a displacement of 9,145 tonnes when fully loaded.
  • Crewed by a staff of about 330.
  • It carries two Seahawk helicopters and uses the Aegis defence system.
  • Weapons include Tomahawk missiles, RUM-139 Asroc anti-submarine missiles and surface-to-air missiles.
Source: US Navy

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