Yahoo – AFP,
3 Nov 2015
![]() |
The USS
Lassen destroyer sailed within 12 nautical miles of a disputed land
formation
in the Spratly Islands (AFP Photo)
|
Beijing
(AFP) - The US military will continue to operate wherever international law
allows, a top US admiral said in Beijing on Tuesday, a week after America
infuriated China by sailing close to artificial islands it is building in the
South China Sea.
"International
seas and airspace belong to everyone and are not the dominion of any single
nation," Admiral Harry Harris said at the Stanford Center at Peking
University.
"Our
military will continue to fly, sail, and operate whenever and wherever
international law allows. The South China Sea is not -- and will not -- be an
exception," he added, according to a transcript.
![]() |
Admiral Harry
Harris heads the US Pacific
Command (AFP Photo/Roslan Rahman)
|
Last week
the US gave a practical demonstration of its policy, sailing the USS Lassen
guided missile destroyer within 12 nautical miles of at least one of the land
formations China claims in the disputed Spratly Islands.
Chinese
officials rebuked Harris over the action, with the People's Liberation Army
chief of general staff Fang Fenghui telling him it had "created a
disharmonious atmosphere for our meeting and this is very regretful".
Foreign
ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular briefing that Washington's
call for Beijing to stop militarising the South China Sea while sending
warships there itself was "an attempt to deprive China of its self-defence
right as a sovereign state".
"It is
a typical manifestation of hypocrisy and hegemonism," she said.
'Frontline forces'
Washington
says it takes no position on sovereignty disputes in the region and the sail-by
was intended to protect freedom of navigation under international law, which it
sees as potentially threatened by China's activities.
The USS
Lassen's mission was part of the US's "routine freedom of navigation
operations", Harris said in his speech, intended to "prevent the
decomposition of international laws and norms".
Beijing
claims sovereignty over almost the whole of the South China Sea on the basis of
a segmented line that first appeared on Chinese maps in the 1940s.
The
"ambiguous maritime claims" represented by China's "so-called
nine-dash line" pose a challenge to navigation, Harris said.
The
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also have overlapping claims
in the sea.
Washington
has repeatedly said it does not recognise Chinese claims to territorial zones
around the artificial islands.
The
contretemps comes as the world's two largest military powers work to keep their
cool over the troubled waters.
Harris made
some conciliatory remarks, praising US-China ties and pointing out that Chinese
and American ships were visiting ports in each other's countries.
"Some
pundits predict a coming clash between our nations. I do not ascribe to this
pessimistic view," Harris said.
Two days
after the USS Lassen's voyage, the chief of US naval operations spoke with his
Chinese counterpart via video.
![]() |
A satellite
image of what is claimed to be an under-construction airstrip at the top
end of
Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratly Islands, in the disputed South China Sea
(AFP
Photo/DigitalGlobe)
|
US
officials said the call between Admiral John Richardson and Admiral Wu Shengli,
who commands the Chinese navy, was "professional and productive".
But China's
official Xinhua news agency paraphrased Wu as warning his counterpart of the
risk of "a serious situation between frontline forces... or even a minor
incident that could spark conflict".
Beijing's
response to the USS Lassen sailing appears to have been carefully calibrated,
with authorities expressing outrage, summoning US ambassador Max Baucus to
protest, and saying they monitored and warned away the vessel -- but without
physically intervening.
China's
position on the islands is leading many countries in the region "to want
to intensify their security cooperation with the United States", US
Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said on Sunday in South Korea.
The
Pentagon chief was in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday for meetings with regional
partners as part of America's ongoing strategic "rebalance" toward
the Asia-Pacific.
A key theme
of the trip is likely to be Beijing's island-building and its wide-ranging
sovereignty claims.
US to operate 'wherever' law allows in South China Sea https://t.co/HFgBl3eqSv pic.twitter.com/e25O8f9SPV
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) November 3, 2015



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