'Immediately stop': China's warning to US after destroyer stand-off in disputed waters

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The guided-missile destroyer John S. McCain crossed through the South China Sea, passing near the disputed Paracel Islands, on Friday. File photo / Wikipedia

Beijing is doubling down on its assertion of total control over the South China Sea, swarming warships and aircraft around a US destroyer as it sailed through international waters at the weekend.

"We urge the US side to immediately stop such kind of provocative actions, strictly manage and control its maritime and air military operations so as not to cause any eventuality," a Chinese military spokesman warned.

The guided-missile destroyer John S. McCain crossed through the South China Sea, passing near the disputed Paracel Islands, on Friday. It's the third such mission since June.

The warship's presence is part of Washington's ongoing "Freedom of Navigation" campaign to assert what it calls common practice. The post-World War II Law of the Sea determines the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait to be international waters.

In this April 2017 file photo, Chinese structures and an airstrip on the man-made Subi Reef at the Spratlys group of islands are seen from a Philippine Air Force transport plane. Photo / AP

This permits the unrestricted movements of any commercial, private or national vessels.

Beijing, despite being a signatory to the International Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), is ignoring this.

Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Colonel Zhang Nandong told the state-controlled Xinhua News Agency that Beijing demanded the US end such "blatant navigation hegemony and military provocation" that "seriously violated China's sovereignty and security interests, and gravely jeopardised peace and stability in the South China Sea".

In July, Beijing accused the US of "sailing through the world like a bully" after the aircraft carriers USS Nimitz and USS Ronald Reagan exercised in the region.

Now Zhang has accused Washington of sending its warships to "show off its force and severely infringe upon China's sovereignty and security interests".

He warned of tougher measures to come, stating Beijing would take "all necessary" measures to safeguard its national security.

Since taking control of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 2012, Chairman Xi Jinping has doubled down on expansionist territorial claims ranging from the Himalayas in the east to the South and East China Seas in the west.

US President Donald Trump with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G-20 summit in Japan on June 29, 2019. Photo / AP

With the international diplomatic and economic crisis surrounding the Covid-19 pandemic, those disputes have further escalated this year.

China has dramatically expanded its military – particularly the navy – in recent years. It's now reached a strength where it can conceivably confront the dominance of the United States.

And Xi may be angling to do exactly that, earlier this year ordering his fleet to "resolutely safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests".

Washington, for its part, has also stepped up the pressure. For the first time, it has formally declared China's territorial claims to be illegal.

Fighters of ASDF scrambled to cope with suspicious aircrafts heading to Japan’s airspace above the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea. Video / JASDF

Beijing's growing belligerence has also upset its relations with neighbouring countries, not least of which includes Australia.

"This is the time for China to give up the nine-dash line. It doesn't work in its interest," East Asian Institute (EAI) military analyst Dr Li told a recent international affairs conference.

But, he said, Xi's nationalistic rhetoric may have painted China into a corner.

"What really drives Chinese foreign policy is not so much public opinion as it is institution dynamics," he added. "If China really decides to modify the nine-dash line … I don't think the PLA will like that."

Beijing claims sovereignty over the entire South China Sea. But closer nations, such as Taiwan, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam, also claim ownership.

The Paracel Islands, so far, are the only islands to have been the subject of Chinese military invasion.

These islands, between Vietnam and the Chinese province of Hainan, were the scene of an intense clash in 1974. The status-quo had been that the eastern Paracels were controlled by Beijing, and the west by Hanoi.

Then Vietnam's navy discovered that Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) troops had established a beachhead in the western portion of the island chain, prompting an armed intervention.

Beijing dramatically escalated the clash, overwhelming Vietnamese forces with a combined-arms amphibious assault.

The waters around the islands have continued to be the scene of stand-offs between fishing and coastguard fleets, with several Vietnamese fishing boats rammed and boarded in recent months.

In July, Hanoi accused Beijing of violating its sovereign waters during the conducting of immense naval exercises in the region, further escalating tensions.

"The Xisha [Paracel] and Nansha [Spratly] Islands are Chinese territory. Vietnam's claim violates international law, including the UN Charter and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and is illegal and invalid," spokesman Zhao Lijian told a press briefing in April, following a formal protest by Vietnam to the United Nations.

But, in 2016, a United Nations international court of arbitration found that China's claims were baseless and without historical justification.

Ruling aside, China insists its alleged sovereignty makes it illegal for foreign militaries to send vessels and aircraft through these waters without permission.

This has prompted Washington to adopt a much harder line: "Beijing's claims to offshore resources across most of the South China Sea are completely unlawful, as is its campaign of bullying to control them," Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in July.

The US and many other nations are defiantly adhering to the Law of the Sea ruling, continuing the free and open access to the South China Sea that has been enjoyed since the end of World War II.

Washington is asserting these rights through its Freedom of Navigation operations (FONOPS), such as that conducted by the USS McCain at the weekend.

Beijing is attempting to assert control over the region through building artificial island fortresses in the Paracel and Spratly islands, and using its Coast Guard to escort fishing fleets into the economic zones of nearby nations.

C0rvette on October 14th, 2020 at 03:20 UTC »

"Immediately stop... can't you see we are trying to infringe on our neighbors sovereignty?"

roararoarus on October 14th, 2020 at 02:38 UTC »

For those bashing the US, the reason why the US still sails through is the act of sailing through goes a long ways in showing to international law, that China does not have sovereignty of the waters.

In other words, if China can prevent any other country from sailing through without permission, it effectively has sovereignty over the disputed waters. This is part of international law.

So the US is doing a service that only it can do for the countries in that region.

mnlaker on October 13rd, 2020 at 23:54 UTC »

Chinese warships swarm a US warship sailing through international waters, and China says US is being provocative and must stop? Fuck that.