Confrontation Looms Over Taiwan-Held South China Sea Islands
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maneuvers near islands impel Taiwanese Marines to embark
Jul 1
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Taiwan’s ministry of defense has confirmed that it has redeployed marines
to a Taiwanese-controlled set of specks about 170 km southeast of Hong Kong
– only one above water – ending 10 years of demilitarization and setting up
a possible confrontation with China’s People’s Liberation Army.

The three are a pair of shoals 11 meters underwater and the third, the
240-ha Pratas Island, also known as Dongshan, is just barely above it. The
island, located 170 km. southeast of Hong Kong in the middle of the route
from China’s military base on Hainan Island to the Pacific Ocean, is
strategically important for China’s advance into the Pacific Ocean.

The first domestically built aircraft carrier, the Shandong, was also
deployed last December to the base on Hainan, increasing pressure on the
Chinese military to capture the islets.

A defense department spokesman told local media the Taiwanese deployment,
which will only last a short amount of time, is aimed at strengthening the
defense capabilities and other logistical and equipment maintenance skills
of the Taiwanese Coast Guard officers stationed on the island. The official
didn’t reveal the number of Marines deployed, when they arrived on the
islands, and how long they will stay.

On the PLA side, the deployment appears extensive, according to a report by
the Tokyo-based Kyodo News, which said “The Southern Theater Command, which
is in charge of protecting the South China Sea, will mobilize an
unprecedented level of forces, including marines, landing ships,
hovercrafts and helicopters,” citing anonymous Chinese military sources.

China’s aggressiveness is an increasingly familiar story as it has expanded
its defense of its so-called “Nine-Dash Line” ostensibly giving it
ownership of the entire South China Sea over the past several years,
sparking confrontations with Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines, which
took China to court in the Hague in 2016 over its claims under the United
Nations Convention on the Law of Sea. Despite the Philippines winning in
court, China refused to recognize the ruling.

An additional rationale for the threat is that the current Taiwanese
government under Tsai Ing-wen has shown no inclination to fulfill a tacit
placeholder agreement accepted by her predecessor, the China-friendly Ma
Ying-jeou. Ma indirectly strengthened China’s claims in the region's
disputed waters by employing talk of “historic rights” relating to the
islands. According to the cross-straits logic of that time, Taiwan is part
of China, so their ancestral rights are one and the same.

Speaking to Asia Sentinel, observers on Chinese military affairs shared
differing opinions as to how plausible a Chinese attack on Pratas is in the
near-to-medium term.

Timothy R. Heath, Senior International Defense Researcher, at the US-based
RAND Corporation, argued that the political cost wouldn’t be worth the
strategic gain of controlling the island even though militarily it would
not be difficult, and control of Pratas would be useful as a strong point
along a key shipping lane in the South China Sea and perhaps for deploying
sensors to provide maritime awareness.

“An attack would almost definitely end hopes of peaceful unification, as
the people of Taiwan would become angered and lack confidence in China as a
partner,” Heath said. “An attack would also spark a serious crisis in
relations with the US, possibly resulting in a major increase in arms sales
and other military assistance to the island. An attack would also probably
result in sanctions from key European, Japanese, and other major economies.
The net effect could be a serious weakening of an economy that has already
suffered from Covid-19 and lasting damage to China’s reputation as an
aspiring ‘peaceful’ great power.”

Rick Fisher, Senior Fellow, International Assessment and Strategy Center,
sees an attack as more plausible, noting that the Pratas are close enough
to China that the PLA could launch assault helicopter formations plus its
large Ukrainian "Zubr" hovercraft to land enough troops and light armor to
take the island.

Fisher pointed out that Itu Aba (or Taiping), another Taiwanese-controlled
island in the region, is 160 km from the large PLA base at Fiery Cross
Reef, plenty close enough for rocket artillery and large helicopter assault
strikes.

“Taking these islands emerges as an option for Beijing because its
political, economic and now military pressure against Taiwan have all
failed to convince Taiwanese to surrender their freedom,” Fischer said.

“The result would be shock and horror much like we have just seen in India
following the June 15 PLA murder of Indian troops,” he added.

Fischer agreed with the notion, however, that in Washington the reaction
could be catastrophic for Beijing.

He says it could be enough for the US to confer diplomatic recognition on
Taiwan and offer to revive the old Mutual Defense Treaty, which with mutual
agreement, could lead to the rapid redeployment of US nuclear weapons to
the island.

“Xi Jinping would then face horrible options: attack Taiwan and lose his
Army and Navy, or attack the United States and lose his country,” Fischer
said.

Asked what Chinese public opinion would hold off a PLA attack on Taiwan's
Pratas, Steve Tsang, Director of the University of London’s SOAS China
Institute, does not really provide a calmative answer, either.

“The majority who expresses a view would welcome it. Most would probably
not care,” Tsang said.

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