http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2435&Itemid=367


China's Personal Lake 


Written by Our Correspondent    
Friday, 30 April 2010 

Beijing delivers new threats over its hegemony over the South China Sea 

China's campaign to present its rise as peaceful has made plenty of headway, 
helped along by actual or promised investment and aid. This is particularly in 
natural resources which Beijing needs and in heavy infrastructure 
projects-power stations, roads etc - for which Chinese companies have expertise 
and being cash rich can offer easy credit terms.

But another prong of China's rise looks increasingly like the application or 
threat of it of hard power towards its neighbors. In the latest such 
indication, on April 25, to quote Xinhua, China's fishery administration said 
it had started regular patrols of the South China Sea, sending two vessels to 
take over from two others currently escorting Chinese fishing boats in the area 
of the Spratly islands (known as Nansha in Chinese, Truong Sa in Vietnamese).

The Chinese spokesman said the patrol ships, based at Sanya on the southern 
coast of Hainan island, were sent to escort fishing boats in the South China 
Sea and reinforce China's fishing rights of the waters around the Nansha 
Islands.

The wording here is somewhat ominous. The vessels are not simply there to 
protect fishing boats from possible harassment by ships belonging to other 
claimants to the islands, or provide medical and other civilian support 
facilities. They are to "reinforce" Chinese fishing rights, implying that they 
may be used to prevent fishing by non-Chinese. That remains to be see but there 
is no doubt that China has been ramping up its actions as well as rhetoric over 
the South China Sea in ways which appear at odds with earlier promises to 
settle disputes peacefully and enabling development of resources on a bilateral 
basis.

That promise was anyway always rather hollow as for the Spratlys bilateral 
deals solve nothing given that all the 200 or islands, banks and shoals 
comprising this widespread group are the subject of at least three claims. 
China's claims cover all of them with Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei 
and Taiwan some of them. The widely scattered Spratlys all lie in the southern 
part of the sea, a long way from Hainan compared with their proximity to the 
southern coast of Vietnam, the Philippines' Palawan island, and the Malaysia 
and Brunei territory on the north coast of Borneo. The Chinese claim stretches 
close to all those coasts and to the nearby gas-rich Natuna islands group which 
belongs to Indonesia.

China has already been using force to back up its claims to the Paracels (Xisha 
to Chinese Huong Sa to Vietnamese) which are only otherwise claimed by Vietnam. 
(China seized them from then South Vietnam in the dying days of the Thieu 
regime in Saigon).

On March 22 Chinese gunboats seized a Vietnamese fishing vessel reportedly 
fishing in waters off the Paracels. China has also sought to strengthen its 
hold on the little sandy islands with plans for tourist development.

The Vietnamese however are showing scant sign of being intimidated by Beijing, 
despite the burgeoning trade between the two countries. When China announced an 
earlier Nansha patrol on April 1 Vietnam responded with a visit by President 
Nguyen Minh Triet to Bach Long Vi, an island halfway between the Vietnam coast 
and China's Hainan island. It is occupied by Vietnam but has been claimed by 
China. Meanwhile Vietnam appears to have been strengthening its presence on the 
Spratlys where it occupies more islands and reefs than any other claimant.

Vietnam is buying six submarines from Russia, which retains close relations 
with Hanoi, and has been gradually developing contacts with the US. Its defense 
minister visited Washington and Paris earlier this year at the same time the 
prime minister was visiting Moscow. It has accepted US ships for repair near 
Cam Ranh Bay, the important naval facility built by the United States during 
the Vietnam War on the south/central coast. The US assistant secretary of state 
for East Asia and the Pacific, Kurt Campbell, remarked in Hong Kong April 26 
that "no other country in southeast Asia wanted an improved relationship with 
the US more than its old enemy, Vietnam."

Vietnam has also been trying to bring more international attention to the South 
China Sea issues, last November organizing a workshop in Hanoi of academic 
experts on the subject. This drew participation not just from China and other 
claimant states but experts in law and history from other countries including 
Russia, Britain, France and Indonesia. Vietnam wants to use its chairmanship of 
Asean to make this more of an Asean issue. 

However, not even all claimant states are keen to ruffle China's feathers at 
present, at least publicly. The Philippines makes occasional nationalistic 
noises on the subject but patriotism must compete with the power of Chinese 
money. 

Malaysia has also attempted to lay claim to three islands and four rock groups. 
Malaysia was the earliest oil operator in the sea through its national oil 
company Petronas. As early as 1990, Malaysia announced it had established a 
submarine base on one of the islets although it didn't take delivery of a 
submarine until 2010.However, its armed forces have been the center of 
corruption scandals, particularly over three submarines, which cast doubt on 
their operational effectiveness.

Although the South China Sea's resources - oil, gas, fish - are significant, 
particularly for the smaller littoral countries, China's main goal is strategic 
- to give it effective control of the shipping lanes and hence of trade between 
Japan and Southeast Asia and hence also the main routes to South Asia, the 
Middle East and Europe.

It is thus ironic that at a time when some Asian nations, not least Indonesia 
and India, are looking to improve relations with the US to ward off the longer 
term possibility of the sea becoming a "Chinese lake," Japan is undermining its 
US links with its attempt to remove its bases from Okinawa

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