Sudah berapa kali kapal Tiongkok tertangkap basah merampok ikan di perairan 
Indonesia??? Mampukah dan maukah pemerintah Indonesia menahan/melawan dominasi 
ekonomi Tkk yang akan semakin besar di Indonesia??? Karena semua orang tahu, 
kalau ekonomi sudah dikuasai negara asing, maka hilanglah kemampuannya untuk 
membela kedaulatan nasional atas wilayahnya....  Contohnya Duterte yang 
mula-mula "galak" terhadap klaim Tiongkok atas wilayah lautnya. Meskipun 
pengadilan internasional membenarkan Filipina, tapi sekarang Duterte tidak lagi 
"galak" terhadap kegiatan pembangunan infrastruktur militer Tkk yang dengan 
jelas memperlihatkan ambisi imperial untuk menguasai Laut Tkk Selatan...296,558 
viewsFeb 28, 2019, 07:32pm
South China Sea: Indonesia And Vietnam Prove Duterte Wrong
Panos MourdoukoutasContributorMarkets



ASSOCIATED PRESS
Indonesia joined Vietnam recently to challenge Duterte’s doctrine in the South 
China Sea.

That’s the notion that any Asian-Pacific country that dares to tame Beijing’s 
ambitions to control the entire South China Sea will face war with China.

This week, Indonesia drew a “red line” in the South China Sea establishing 
fishing rights in areas where China claims “overlapping” rights, according to 
BenarNews.


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Indonesia Moves to Establish Fishing Zone near South China Sea

Jakarta seeks to protect Natuna island waters that China claims as fisheries.
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Indonesia’s move comes roughly two years after the country renamed its maritime 
region in the southwest part of the South China Sea as the “North Natuna Sea,” 
asserting sovereignty in the area.



Meanwhile, Vietnam has taken its own steps to tame Beijing’s ambitions to 
control the South China Sea. Last month, Hanoi pushed for a pact to outlaw many 
of China’s ongoing activities in the South China Sea.  Like the building of 
artificial islands, blockades and offensive weaponry such as missile 
deployments; and the Air Defense Identification Zone—a conduct code China 
initiated back in 2013.

Chinese, Indonesian, and Philippines Shares
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These activities are part of Beijing’s efforts to assert complete dominance in 
the South China Sea and push the US out.

“Although China does not want to usurp the United States’ position as the 
leader of the global order, its actual aim is nearly as consequential,” says 
Oriana Skylar Mastro in “The Stealth Superpower: How China Hid Its Global 
Ambitions,”published in the January/February issue of Foreign Affairs. “In the 
Indo-Pacific region, China wants complete dominance.; it wants to force the 
United States out and become the region’s unchallenged political, economic, and 
military hegemon.”

That’s why America has stepped up patrols in disputed South China Sea waters, 
asserting its willingness to keep the waterway an open sea to all commercial 
and military vessels.

And that has provided some sort of insurance for Indonesia and Vietnam against 
an unmeasured response from China.

Meanwhile, Indonesia’s and Vietnam’s moves have proved Duterte wrong: standing 
up to China doesn’t lead to war.

So far, financial markets in the region have been discounting these 
developments as “noise,” rather than something more serious, focusing instead 
on the trade war between Beijing and Washington. But they could come back to 
haunt markets once the trade war is settled.

A growing conflict between China on the one side and America on the other over 
who will write the navigation rules for the South China Sea raises geopolitical 
risks for the global economy. And it adds to investor anxieties over the fate 
of international trade and the economic integration of the Asia-Pacific region.

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