By David Lague
HONG KONG (Reuters) - China has adopted a more aggressive stance
in recent weeks on territorial disputes in the South China Sea as
hard-line officials and commentators call on Beijing to take a tougher
line with rival claimants.
China's supreme policymaking body, the Politburo Standing Committee,
is made up entirely of civilians, but outspoken People's Liberation Army
(PLA) officers, intelligence advisers and maritime agency chiefs are
arguing that Beijing should be more forceful in asserting its
sovereignty over the sea and the oil and natural gas believed to lie
under the sea-bed.
Most of them blame the United States' so-called strategic "pivot" to
Asia for emboldening neighboring countries, particularly the Philippines
and Vietnam, to challenge China's claims.
"China now faces a whole pack of aggressive neighbors headed by
Vietnam and the Philippines and also a set of menacing challengers
headed by the United States, forming their encirclement from outside the
region," wrote Xu Zhirong, a deputy chief captain with China Marine
Surveillance, in the June edition of China Eye, a publication of the
Hong Kong-based China Energy Fund Committee.
"And, such a band of eager lackeys is exactly what the U.S. needs for its strategic return to Asia," he wrote.
Most Chinese and foreign security policy analysts believe China wants
to avoid military conflict across sea lanes that carry an annual $5
trillion in ship-borne trade, particularly if it raises the prospect of
U.S. intervention.
However, they say Beijing is increasingly determined to block any
unified effort from rival claimants to negotiate over disputes,
preferring instead to isolate much smaller and weaker states in direct
talks.
There was evidence of this harder line at an annual foreign
ministers' meeting of the 10-member Association of South East Asian
Nations (ASEAN) bloc earlier this month where diplomats said China's
influence behind the scenes led to an unprecedented breakdown in the
grouping's traditional preference for maintaining an appearance of
harmony and unity.
The meeting in Phnom Penh ended in disarray without progress on a
proposed code of conduct that was aimed at minimizing the risk of
conflict in the South China Sea or issuing a concluding communique.
China's close ally Cambodia, the meeting's host, blocked every
attempt to include tensions in the South China Sea on the agenda, said
the diplomats from other member nations.
THE GARRISON
On the military front, China's powerful Central Military Commission
has approved the formal establishment of a military garrison for the
South China Sea.
The move, announced this week, is essentially a further assertion of
China's sovereignty claims after it last month raised the administrative
status of the seas to the level of a city, which it calls Sansha.
The official Xinhua news agency said the Sansha garrison would be
responsible for "national defense mobilization ... guarding the city and
supporting local emergency rescue and disaster relief" and "carrying
out military missions".
The city government is located on the 2.13-square km Yongxing Island,
according to Xinhua, which contains a small military airport, a sea
port, roads, a clinic, a post office and an observatory. This is in the
Paracels, a group of islands also claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan.
A ship calls twice in a month from nearby Hainan province to serve its 613 residents.
Xu, a regular commentator on maritime security issues, is one of many
analysts arguing that recent tensions are a direct result of the Obama
administration's announcement late last year of a strategic shift which
would eventually see 60 per cent of the U.S. navy's warships deployed to
the Asia Pacific, up from the current 50 per cent.
The U.S. move is widely seen as a response to China's growing
military power and increasingly assertive behavior in dealing with
contested territory.
China's recent rows with the Philippines over the Scarborough Shoal
and Vietnam over oil exploration rights have heightened regional fears
that tension in the South China Sea could lead to armed conflict.
One of China's most hawkish army officers, Major General Zhu Chenghu,
an influential teacher and strategy researcher at Beijing's National
Defence University, has dismissed the entitlement of these rivals to the
disputed waters.
UNREASONABLE AND ILLEGAL
In a speech to the World Peace Forum in Beijing earlier this month,
Zhu said it was "unreasonable and illegal" for the Philippines and
Vietnam to claim territory that historically belonged to China.
He said there had been no disputes in the South China Sea before the
1970s when maps published by rival claimants also acknowledged it was
Chinese territory.
"Relevant countries did not begin to lay claim to islands and sea
waters in the area until the discovery of large amounts of oil and gas
reserves in the South China Sea," he said, according to an extract of
his speech published in the official Global Times newspaper last week.
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