【Comment】
At a dinner party about five years ago, I pointed out a harsh condition
that the US would face: China would split the Seventh Fleet’s AOR into two separate
areas by unilaterally controlling South China Sea. Unfortunately, the nightmare has more than real.
Commenting on Chinese fast moves on South China Sea, Daniel Russel, the
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, remarked that
no matter how much sand China piles up on reefs, it can't "manufacture
sovereignty." International laws,
such as UNCLOS, give marine vessels the right of the Innocent passage to sail
through territorial sea; foreign aircraft have every legitimate right to fly
outside the 12-mile territorial space.
Delibeately ignoring international laws, Beijing insisted on
establishing its first ADIZ on East China Sea in 2013 and has demanded all aircrafts
flying over the zone to Chinese authority for prior to the actual flight. Now China is expanding her self-claimed
authority over her EEZ. Chinese military
infrastructures together with weapons and radar stations are already there,
exercising actual functions. PLA is warning
all foreign vessels and air planes that pass the self-claimed “military alert zone”
and “zone of control.” Without doubt,
the man-made islands are more than just piles of sands.
That is the harsh point when the physical strength means to challenge
the legitimate rights.
However, it fires back: Beijing’s serial self-indulgent moves are unifying
the neighboring countries whose legitimate rights under UNCLOS are infringed by
China. The US successfully invited some
22 countries to Hawaii attending PALS, the USPACOM-led Amphibious Leaders
Symposium, part of Culebra Koa 15.
The news reported that the US had a few talks
with Taiwan on the issue. Besides arranging
formulation and the support of the amphibious mission, it might also express the US’s grave concerns
about the suggestion of the cooperation between MYJ administration and China in
the official 2010 Assessment Report on South China Sea.
Daniel Russel meant to downgrade the tension arising from Chinese
unilateral moves, but few will believe his optimistic assurance that there is
no risk of armed conflict. revised at
2045
約五年前吧?我在一場餐會上指出:中國將以南海切割第七艦隊防區,從而解構美軍全球調度資源。現在,惡夢逐漸成真。
Daniel Russel說「全世界的沙土堆在一起也不能製造主權」;國際法賦予船隻「領海的無害通過權」:飛機也有權飛越領海外。顯示北京此舉是白紙黑字上的無效。
但北京不是這樣想:中國在東海ADIZ聲稱:飛機飛越其ADIZ需要中國同意,專更別說200海里的屬經濟區。無法國際法如何規定,PLA的機場、港口、預警雷達、防空飛彈實際存在,發揮著真正的影響力。PLA的military alert zone , zone of control,表明此意圖。
這是頭痛的地方,但頭痛也是助力——美國就成功集合22國進行奪島論壇與觀摩。
所謂美台有多次商討,一來是阻止馬政府「兩岸合組艦隊」的想像,二來是將來發生奪島時的聯合支援。
羅素的受訪是滅火,澄清美中沒有走向戰爭的跡象。但沒有人相信。
軍機偵察被共軍警告 美助卿回嗆:正常人不會想阻止美海軍○自由 (2015.05.23)
〔駐美特派員曹郁芬/華府二十一日報導〕美國國務院亞太助卿羅素今天表示,歐巴馬政府讓美國有線電視新聞網(CNN)登上美國「海神式」反潛巡邏機進行偵察南海報導,目的是「透明化」,美國要分享所做與所見的。他堅持,美國在「國際水域和國際領空」進行這些活動完全恰當,美國會繼續在全球完全地執行這些權利。
羅素上週末才隨美國國務卿凱瑞訪問北京。他今天在外籍記者中心就亞洲情勢向媒體簡報,美中在南海的較勁成為焦點。對於中國海軍曾對美國偵察機發出八次警告,羅素回嗆,「沒有一個心智正常的人會想要阻止美國海軍」,那是一個錯誤的賭注。
「全世界的沙土堆在一起也不能製造主權」
他表示,全世界的沙土堆在一起也不能製造主權,問題不在沙土,而在行為。歐巴馬政府讓CNN隨偵察機飛過中國控制的永暑礁等礁石,因為沒有人希望一覺醒來看見有人片面改變現狀,見到中國在南海擴張並部署軍事設施。大家清楚了解事實後,才有機會清楚地對話。
他說,凱瑞和中國國家主席習近平等人會面時,表達了美國對中國在南海造島的嚴重關切,因為這不僅造成情勢的不穩定,中國片面的行動甚至讓鄰邦感受到威脅。美國在南海主權爭議上不採取立場,但美國在航行和飛行自由、自由貿易上有立場,而且會堅定維護。凱瑞告訴中方,南海問題確實衝擊到美中關係。
羅素表示,許多國家在南海都有利益,但南海是一個共同利益,沒有一個國家的利益可以違反國際法,所有主權爭議應依據國際法,透過外交和平解決,中國沒有理由不能在今年十二月和東協國家達成南海行為準則的共識。不過他強調,美中關係基礎堅實,美中並沒有走到一個攤牌的轉捩點。
亞太副助卿透露 美台曾多次討論南海情勢
美國亞太副助卿董雲裳今天在布魯金斯研究所演講時則表示,美國針對令人憂心的南海情勢與台灣有過數次討論,台灣是一個主權宣示國,擁有太平島,愈來愈有興趣參與解決南海爭議,美國認為這有建設性。
基本上,美國明確呼籲所有南海主權宣示國避免採取片面行動來改變現狀,台灣願意扮演有助益的角色,可以和東協與其他宣示國對話。至於美國政府是否要求台灣政府澄清南海十一段線的主張,董雲裳說,美國要求所有南海主權宣示國根據國際法澄清自己的主張,不管台灣未來哪一個黨執政,美國立場不變。美國也反對在有爭議的領土上擴張或強化設施以改變現狀,這些都違反國際海洋法公約。
Lawmakers press admin over response to China
island building○AP (2015.05.13)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Senators pressured the Obama administration on
Wednesday for a more robust response to China's provocative actions in East
Asian seas, as concern grows in Washington that Beijing is building artificial
islands to assert military control over disputed territory.
Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations, complained that the administration lacked a "coherent
policy," and disputed the administration's view that China is losing international
stature because of its provocative moves.
"I see no price whatsoever that China is playing for their
activities in the South and East China Seas. None. In fact, I see us paying a
price," Corker said. "We see our friends coming in constantly worried
about where we are, what our commitment levels are."
Secretary of State John Kerry is traveling this weekend to Beijing,
where he is to meet with President Xi Jinping. U.S. officials say he'll be
carrying a message that China's large-scale land reclamation and general
behavior in the South China Sea will hurt China's image and its relations with
its neighbors and, potentially, with the United States itself.
China has rattled the region with its assertive claims both over islands
held by Japan in the East China Sea, and in the South China Sea, where islands
and reefs are contested by China and five other Asian claimants. China has
reclaimed about 2,000
acres of dry land since 2014 that could be used as
airstrips or for military purposes, according to U.S. officials.
China claims the islands are its territory. Its Foreign Ministry on
Wednesday voiced serious concern about a Wall Street Journal report, which
cited anonymous U.S. officials, that the U.S. is considering sending military
ships and planes to challenge Chinese claims to islands it is building.
The assistant secretary of defense for the Asia-Pacific, David Shear,
declined to comment on the report at the committee hearing Wednesday, and on
whether the U.S. was considering a demonstration of freedom of navigation
within 12 nautical miles of the islands' notional territorial zone. But Shear
said many of the features claimed by China in the disputed Spratly island chain
are submerged and do not carry territorial rights.
"We claim the right of innocent passage
in such areas and we exercise that right regularly both in the South China Sea
and globally, and we are going to continue exercising that right both
under the surface of the water and in the air," he said.
Top diplomat for East Asia, Daniel Russel, said that no matter how
sand China piles up on reefs, it can't "manufacture sovereignty."
He said the U.S. is calling for
restraint on territorial disputes, and "diplomacy will continue to be our
instrument of first resort."
Russel maintained that China's provocative
actions had hurt its standing. He
cited recent, thinly veiled criticism of China by the Southeast Asian bloc and
a legal challenge brought by the Philippines. The United States is "increasingly in
demand" as a guarantor of security in the
region, he said.
"If
the Chinese strategy was to freeze us out, it has backfired,"
Russel said.
But the top-ranking Democrat on the committee, Sen. Ben Cardin of
Maryland, complained that sometimes it appears that the only U.S. response to
provocative actions by China is a "press release."
U.S. Flies
Over a Chinese Project at Sea, and Beijing Objects○NY Times(2015.05.22)
WASHINGTON — The United States and China on Friday escalated their dispute
over contested territory in the South China Sea, after the Chinese repeatedly ordered
an American military surveillance plane to abandon flights over areas where China
has been building artificial islands.
The continued American surveillance flights in areas where China is creating
new islands in the South China Sea are intended to challenge the Chinese government’s
claims of expanded territorial sovereignty.
Further raising the challenge, Pentagon officials said they were discussing sending warships into waters that the
United States asserts are international and open to passage, but that China
says are within its zone of control.
The Defense Department planning comes in response to China’s accelerated
efforts to build new islands in the South China Sea to bolster claims to a vastly
expanded area of sovereignty, a direct challenge
to the United States and other nations in the region.
The Chinese government expressed “strong dissatisfaction” with the surveillance
flights, while urging the United States to cease actions that they said risked increasing
tensions. Hong Lei, the Foreign Ministry
spokesman, warned that the American flights, which he called “very irresponsible
and dangerous,” were “likely to cause an accident.”
But the Obama administration was adamant in saying
that the American Navy surveillance flights were made in international airspace. Officials from the State Department and the Pentagon
said that China’s land reclamation in the South China Sea was undermining stability
in the region and that the Chinese had no business building airstrips on the contested
Spratly Islands.
“This land reclamation is going fast,”
Cmdr. William Marks, the Navy’s chief of media, said in an interview on Friday. “Really fast — faster than we ever imagined.” He said the Navy had
no intention of stopping its almost daily reconnaissance flights.
“We have freedom of flight over international airspace,” he said.
The Navy on Thursday released video footage of an incident Wednesday when a Chinese
military dispatcher issued eight warnings — in English — to a Navy P8-A Poseidon
surveillance plane as it flew over Fiery Cross Reef, the site of an extensive Chinese
land reclamation project in
the Spratly Islands, a group reefs halfway between Vietnam and the Philippines in
the South China Sea. The Navy also released
video footage that it
said documented the continued expansion of the reefs, which have been turned into
artificial islands with airport infrastructure, including a runway.
American military officials took a CNN crew along on the Navy reconnaissance
flight on Wednesday; a military official said the decision
to take a television crew and to release the video footage was deliberate.
“It’s important that the American public, and the Asian public, too, understands
what’s going on out there,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak publicly about a delicate international issue.
A second Defense Department official said discussions were underway on whether
the military would increase its naval presence in international waters in the area,
including additional patrols using frigates, destroyers and small combat ships. Such a move would
most likely further annoy China. Disagreement
over the Spratly Islands has continued for several years. The Spratlys are claimed by at least three other
countries, including the Philippines, an American ally; and Vietnam, which has sought
warmer relations with Washington.
Earlier this year, analysts released satellite images of a concrete runway
that China was building on Fiery Cross Reef,
one of the Spratly Islands. The runway is
expected to be about 10,000
feet long. The construction
on Fiery Cross Reef is part of a larger Chinese reclamation project
involving scores of dredgers on at least five islands. China is converting tiny reefs, once barely visible
above water, into islands large enough to handle military
hardware, personnel and recreation centers for workers.
The Chinese government has maintained that the reclamation efforts are meant
to serve civilian purposes like providing a base for search-and-rescue operations. But the Chinese military has also said that the reclamation
is for “necessary military defense.”
A senior administration official expressed concern that China was trying
to build up the islands as a way to make a case for Chinese sovereignty — to “create facts
on the ground — and we can’t allow that.”
Separately, Daniel R. Russel, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia,
told reporters that American military aircraft would continue to exercise the right
to operate in international airspace.
Under the leadership of President Xi Jinping, China has asserted claims in
the South China Sea that have increasingly butted against Asian allies of the United
States. In particular, the issue of territorial
boundaries has come into play.
The United States says that foreign
aircraft have the right to fly over waters beyond a nation’s 12-mile territorial
line. China, meanwhile, asserts that foreign
aircraft do not have the right to fly within its 200-mile exclusive economic zone
without permission.
The contentious issue has flared up before. In late 2013, China set off a trans-Pacific uproar
when it declared that an “air defense identification zone” gave it the right to
identify and possibly take military action against aircraft near disputed islands
in the East China Sea. Japan, which administers
the islands, refused to recognize China’s claim, and the United States has since
defied China by sending military planes into the zone, unannounced.
The islands, known as the Senkaku in Japanese and the Diaoyu in Chinese,
are a seven-hour boat ride from Japan, even farther from China. But they, like the Spratlys, have been at the
center of ongoing territorial disputes among China and its neighbors.
Pentagon officials say they worry that China
will try to declare another air defense identification zone over the Spratlys. “Is this foreshadowing?” one Defense Department
official, who spoke anonymously to discuss a national security matter, said on Friday. “Well, we can certainly see them trying.”
“The Navy flyover was a measured response, meant to signal to the Chinese
that the world is watching — literally — their provocative reclaiming of land that
people don’t agree that they own,” said Andrew L. Oros, an associate professor of political science
at Washington College in Chestertown, Md., and a specialist on East Asia. “This idea that China has, that it can just act
unilaterally when other people don’t agree, has to be confronted.”
To build the artificial island, China has dispatched concrete pylons on cargo
vessels from the mainland to build a retaining wall and create the island and a
harbor, according to Sean O’Connor, a former United States Air Force intelligence
analyst who now works as the principal imagery analyst for IHS Janes, a publication
that examines military issues.
China has used dozens of dredges that suck up sand and then dump it to make
landfill and has constructed concrete manufacturing plants to provide asphalt for
runways, he said.
Mr. O’Connor said the Chinese seemed
to be particularly focused on the runway.
“It looks as though they go over and over it again to make it thick, and
can take any kind of plane,” he said in a telephone interview. In particular, he said, the Chinese would be interested
in landing bombers and fighter jets.
Dan Levin contributed reporting from Beijing. Yufan Huang contributed research from Beijing.
Qtote:
回覆刪除“"We claim the right of innocent passage in such areas and we exercise that right regularly both in the South China Sea and globally, and we are going to continue exercising that right both under the surface of the water and in the air," he said.”
This is a big mistake. The US NAVY claims the freedom of the high seas, nothing about the right of innocent passage. Innocent passage is only happened within territorial sea.
Quoting Ccc’s comment:
回覆刪除“"We claim the right of innocent passage in such areas and we exercise that right regularly both in the South China Sea and globally, and we are going to continue exercising that right both under the surface of the water and in the air," he said.”
This is a big mistake. The US NAVY claims the freedom of the high seas, nothing about the right of innocent passage. Innocent passage is only happened within territorial sea.
—————————————-
This is a big mistake. Or, is it?
The US does not take into consideration boisterous claims of sovereignty. It condones peaceable current effective control. And it can live with it, apparently, as long as the controlling power does not abuse the rights attached to such effective control to impinge on freedom of commerce and intelligence gathering. As always when dealing with Zhongnanhai, the US seems to say, “suit yourselves with obsolete concepts of sovereignty based on legally dubious effective control, we do not mind . . . as long as it does not cramp our own style in the area.”
Zhongnanhai’s de facto control over those loose ends of SFPT is in essence a matter of defense. In that respect, their motivations match those Japan held when they asserted their control of the Spratlys and the Paracels in 1938. When Imperial HQs strategized over the map of the South China Sea, their expeditionary forces had already sealed off China’s Pacific seaboard.
As President F. D. Roosevelt’ policy of covert aid to a besieged Chiang Kai-shek picked up pace, plan B was to supply Chiang’s American “volunteers” (Flying Tigers) via the port of Haiphong and the Kunming-Haiphong railway the French had established in the early 1900s.
The Japanese were not dupes. They saw that American support for what it was. But since theirs was not a declared war against China, they were at a loss to call attention on FDR’s blatant act of war against Japan. Control of the Paracel islands meant monitoring shipping into the Bay of Tonkin and eventually cutting the flow of American aid to Chiang. Control of the Spratly Islands meant monitoring shipping in and out of the Philipines.
In the shadows of President Obama’s declared pivot to Asia, DoD is probably revamping President Theodore Roosevelt ’s “Plan Orange”. At least, Zhongnanhai assumes that much. Another ulterior motive of Zhongnanhai is arguably to prevent or at least hinder any form of outside material support being supplied to a rebellion always liable to occur against it authority in a perennially restive Southern China.
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/九段線#/media/File:9_dotted_line.png
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunming–Hai_Phong_Railway