*Hong Kong (CNN) *-- The South China Sea -- a 1.3 million square mile patch
of the Pacific Ocean bracketed by China and several Southeast Asian nations
-- is dotted with hundreds of largely uninhabited islands and coral atolls
that are home to some of the world's most diverse marine life.

Also under its waves lie potentially huge reserves of natural gas and oil. A
Chinese estimate suggests as much as *213 billion barrels of oil lie
untapped in the South China Sea* which, if true, would make it the largest
oil reserve outside Saudi Arabia, according to the U.S. Energy Information
Administration.

That prospect has cross-stitched the sea with competing claims from China,
Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan. A recent spate of
incidents between Chinese and Vietnamese vessels in the sea has fueled a
growing rift between the communist neighbors, creating strange bedfellows as
Hanoi embraces closer military ties with historic foes in Washington.

The South China Sea has now become a petri dish for swirling changes
churning the geopolitical landscape, analysts say, as the rising power of
China butts up against the established economic and military might of the
U.S.

"How these disputes are resolved will tell us how politics in Asia is going
to play out in the next 20 to 30 years," said Mark Valencia, a fellow at the
National Asia Research Program and expert on the South China Sea dispute.
"This will be the blueprint."

*Why is this happening now?*


The competing stakes in the South China Sea are nothing new: territorial
claims to the islands stretch back decades, even centuries, according to
some of the nations vying in the sea grab.

The dispute took center stage earlier this month when defense officials from
28 Asia-Pacific nations gathered at the Shangri-La hotel in Singapore.
China, for the first time, sent its top soldier to the annual meeting --
General Liang Guanglie -- who spoke at length about China's peace-loving
nature and focus on cooperative development and security in the region.

His olive branch was met with skepticism, said Alan Dupont, a regional
security analyst who was at the meeting. "It was a packed hall, and there
were a lot of hostile questions directed to China from (participants from)
Asia and the United States," said Dupont, director of the Centre for
International Security Studies at the University of Sydney.

Zakaria: Beijing's foreign policy
blunders<http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/14/beijings-blunder/>

Many questions seem to reflect a fear of growing Chinese assertiveness in
the disputed waters. In late May, the Vietnamese Ministry of Defense
reported that a Chinese patrol boat slashed a submerged cable of a oil and
gas survey ship operated by PetroVietnam, the state energy firm. A similar
incident happened on June 9 -- just four days after Liang's address -- when
a Chinese patrol boat cut cables from a Vietnamese ship doing seismic
surveys off its southern coast, Vietnam's Foreign Ministry reported. Beijing
maintains <../2011/WORLD/asiapcf/06/14/china.vietnam/index.html> that
Vietnamese vessels have been illegally surveying in Chinese waters and
harassing Chinese fishing boats.

China and Vietnam: A timeline of
conflict<../2011/WORLD/asiapcf/06/27/china.vietnam.timeline/index.html>

Vietnam is not the only nation skirmishing with Chinese patrol boats. The
Philippines, on the western border of the South China Sea, also reported
Chinese boats cutting cables of a survey ship and threatening to ram its
boats in March, according to Manila's Foreign Ministry.

China claims both nations were exploring in disputed waters. China says it
is not to blame. "If you want to know why there is tension in South China
Sea, I think you have to go and ask the country or countries that have made
all the provocations," Cui Lei, China's vice minister of the Foreign
Ministry, told CNN in a rare interview last week

*How much oil and gas is under the sea?*

How these dispute are resolved will tell us how politics in Asia is going to
play out in the next 20 to 30 years
--Mark Valencia, National Asia Research Program

China claims there could be enough oil and gas to rival Saudi Arabia's
reserves, but those claims have yet to be proven, according to a U.S. Energy
Information Administration report. Still, there are enough proven wells in
the South China Sea to tantalize the players, which explains why oil and gas
survey vessels are at the heart of the recent incidents.

"I think the critical reason now in the increase in tension is the rising
energy insecurity in the region, particularly in China," Dupont said.

The smaller nations in the region are feeling the pressure to stake their
claims for oil and fishing rights, or risk losing them to a more assertive
China, analysts say.

"There's a sense coastal states like Vietnam and the Philippines need to use
the economic area more urgently, so they need to catch more fish now, they
need to discover more oil now," said James Manicom, an expert on maritime
disputes at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo,
Canada.

*Why do so many nations claim the waters?*

At the heart of both disputes is a term of international maritime law known
as "Exclusive Economic Zone," where nations are allowed sole rights to fish
and develop resources within 200 nautical miles of a country's shores. That
has created interest in nations' grabbing uninhabited islands -- often
little more than rocky atolls -- to extend their zone.

China lays the broadest claim, covering all of the Spratly Islands in the
southern part of the ocean and Paracel Islands to the north -- essentially
most of the South China Sea. Taiwan and Vietnam also claim the entirety of
both island groups, while Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines say they own
part of the Spratlys. All but Brunei occupy some of the disputed islands
with naval bases, airstrips and even resorts.

"It seems to me in East Asian states that if you act like you own a piece of
a claim, you do -- possession is nine-tenths of the law," Manicom said.
  Whether it's right or wrong, China is looking like the bad guy
--James Manicom, Balsillie School of International Affairs

There is plenty of oil being produced along the undisputed coastal areas of
the South China Sea -- Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam are all net oil
exporters while China also produces a chunk of its offshore oil from the
South China Sea, said Kang Wu, an energy expert at the East-West Center in
Honolulu.

"If they want further develop production and reduce the decline of aging oil
fields, a move into deeper water for drilling has become important for every
country involved," Wu said.

*What's the U.S. stake in this?*

Last week the U.S. -- which has a defense treaty with the Philippines --
agreed to help modernize Manila's military during a Washington visit by
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario. "While we are a small country, we are
prepared to do what is necessary to stand up to any aggressive action in our
backyard," del Rosario said at a press conference with U.S. Secretary of
State Hilary Clinton.

The United States waded into the water dispute a year ago when Clinton
attended the annual defense meeting at the Shangri-La in Singapore. Clinton
rattled Beijing when she offered to mediate the dispute and suggested a
peaceful outcome was in U.S. national interests. At the time, Chinese
Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi called Clinton's comments "an attack on China."

Washington changed tack last year after a high-level defense meeting in
which Beijing told the U.S. that the South China Sea was a "core security
concern for China," Dupont said. "Previously only Tibet, Xinjiang and Taiwan
were mentioned as a 'core security concern'."

Beijing considers Taiwan a renegade province and struggles with separatists
movements in Tibet and Xinjiang, so having the South China Sea mentioned in
the same breath "really raised alarm bells in Washington, and brought
Clinton to Singapore," Dupont said.

The shipping lanes of the South China Sea are among the busiest in the world
and a vital lifeline for China's growing hunger for commodities such as oil,
natural gas and iron ore.

To hedge against a more assertive China, Southeast Asian nations are turning
to Washington. Vietnam and the U.S. have announced a new round of joint
military exercises, and the U.S. recently held joint drills with the
Philippines. "There have been rapid defense engagements (with the U.S.) in
the past 12 months," Dupont said. "The Philippines is welcoming the U.S.
back after kicking them out of their naval bases a few years back."
 "This is an opportunity for the U.S. to get back in Asia in a big way,"
Manicom added.

*Who's the bad guy here?*

General Liang's charm offensive in Singapore earlier this month -- and a
similar trip to the Philippines after the March incident with a Filipino
vessel -- shows Beijing's concern about rising tensions in the region,
analysts say. But several cautioned that blaming China would be a
misinterpretation of the forces at work in the South China Sea.

Nations liberally interpret maritime treaties to their own advantage,
experts said. "There is a sense of sanctimoniousness on all sides," said
Valencia. He points out the U.S. regularly cites the UN Convention on Law of
the Sea -- which allows free navigation of seas within the 200-nautical mile
"Exclusive Economic Zones" at the heart of the South China Sea debate. Yet
the U.S. has never actually ratified the treaty.

"What they're talking about is free reign for their spy ships and planes,"
Valencia said. "From the China perspective its, 'yeah, you have right to
freedom of navigation, but does that mean you can stick an EP-3 (U.S. Navy
reconnaissance plane) up our nose anytime you want?' "

In recent disputes with Vietnam and the Philippines, "China says it was not
the one who made the first move," Wu said. "China claims that these other
countries went deeper into disputed areas. The reaction from China is
believed to be firmer than in the past. On the one hand, a firmer reaction
is different from a muted reaction. On the other hand, firmer doesn't mean
China is about to take over the disputed areas by force."

China's Foreign Vice Minister Cui told CNN: "China has done everything
possible to maintain stability in the region, and we always believe that any
disputes, any possible disputes over territory, over the water in the South
China Sea, should be resolved through bilateral negotiations and dialogue,"
Cui said. "We still have the same position now."

While China apparently wants to iron out territorial disputes individually
with each country involved, its neighbors have other ideas. "The Southeast
Asian nations are now starting to get together and talk about common
approaches to China, which is the last thing Beijing wants," Dupont said.
 The growing rift has eroded much of the goodwill China has built with its
neighbors as all economies in the region benefited from Beijing's rise in
financial clout, overtaking Japan last year as the world's second wealthiest
nation, analysts say. "Whether it's right or wrong, China is looking like
the bad guy," Manicom said. "That perception is a problem."

*Why are the stakes rising?*

The fear on all sides is that the rising tenor of the South China Sea
debate, coupled with increased U.S. military involvement, is creating a 21st
Century Cold War in Southeast Asia. Tensions over a similar perennial
dispute between China and Japan regarding a group of islands in the East
China Sea boiled over last year when Japan arrested the crew of a Chinese
sailing vessel, sparking nationalist demonstrations in both countries and a
war of words at the highest levels between Tokyo and Beijing.

Similar demonstrations recently erupted in Vietnam over territorial claims
in the South China Sea, and computer hackers from both sides have attacked
websites in the opposing country, posting nationalistic images and messages,
according to Chinese media reports. On Saturday Vietnamese and Chinese
officials met and promised a peaceful resolution to the water dispute,
according to China's Foreign Ministry. Yet on Sunday protesters gathered
outside the Chinese embassy in Hanoi for the fourth consecutive week of
demonstrations, according to local media reports.

Rivals push to rename the South China
Sea<http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/14/rivals-push-to-rename-the-south-china-sea-2/?iref=allsearch>

There is increasing concern that nationalist sentiment could force nations
to adopt a more belligerent tone both on the seas and in negotiations. "The
big fear here is not that any of the countries want to have a conflict ...
but as these tensions go up, countries get pushed into a position
domestically that causes them to take a harder line," Dupont said. "The big
concern is miscalculation, misunderstanding and misperception.

"We just came out of probably the most peaceful 25 years Asia has ever
seen," Dupont added. "We're at a tipping point here at the moment and the
next 12 or 18 months could be very important."
 http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/06/27/south.china.sea.conflict/

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