U.S. admiral: China's veiled sea moves risky

U.S. Navy Adm. Scott Swift, head of U.S. Pacific Fleet, speaks aboard the guided missile destroyer USS Benfold as it is docked in the port in Qingdao in eastern China's Shandong Province, Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2016.
U.S. Navy Adm. Scott Swift, head of U.S. Pacific Fleet, speaks aboard the guided missile destroyer USS Benfold as it is docked in the port in Qingdao in eastern China's Shandong Province, Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2016.

QINGDAO, China -- The response from Beijing and others to an arbitration panel's ruling invalidating China's vast South China Sea maritime claims has produced no surprises, but much more military transparency is needed to reduce tensions in the region, the commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet said Tuesday.

Adm. Scott Swift criticized China-Russia joint naval exercises planned next month in the South China Sea, saying the choice of location was not conducive to "increasing the stability within the region." He also said any decision by China to declare an air defense identification zone over the strategic water body would be "very destabilizing from a military perspective."

Swift was visiting the northern Chinese port of Qingdao as part of efforts to build trust and understanding between the two navies, now locked in a protracted competition for primacy in East Asia, where the U.S. has traditionally been the dominant military power.

Attention has been fixed on the South China Sea since the July 12 ruling by The Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration in a case brought by the Philippines. China refused to participate in the case or recognize the ruling, and strongly criticized the U.S. for encouraging its ally to pursue the matter.

Since then, Beijing has launched air patrols over the South China Sea, said it would consider declaring an air defense zone and vowed to continue work on man-made islands created from piling sand atop coral reefs in the highly contested Spratly group.

New satellite photos show work proceeding on what seem to be two dozen hardened concrete airplane hangars on the islands suitable for housing Chinese air force planes, including strategic bombers and inflight refuelers.

The photos were collected and studied by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank, and reported in The New York Times.

China has said the new islands are primarily to assist fishermen and other causes, as well as to reinforce its sovereignty claims. China also says the islands should be able to defend themselves, and that it is entitled to build whatever structures it wishes on them.

Meanwhile, Japan protested Tuesday over a marked increase in the number of Chinese coast guard and fishing vessels in waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Swift said the responses of all parties to the arbitration ruling had been consistent with their long-held positions, and it was unclear what, if any, recent Chinese actions had been taken specifically in response.

"I think it's a mistake to take them individually and not look at them as a collective. And you have to look at it as an extension of an arc," Swift said.

Such judgments were made more difficult by a lack of transparency about intentions, he said, repeating a frequent U.S. criticism of China's secretive military.

"The uncertainty in the region is because of the lack of transparency and exactly where it is that arc is going. And that arc is defined by multiple data points," he said.

Swift cited two examples: The still unexplained cancellation by China of a visit by the aircraft carrier USS Stennis earlier this year, and the reason for the construction of the new aircraft hangars.

"That increases the angst and uncertainty, that lack of transparency, and that is generally destabilizing as opposed to a stabilizing action," Swift said.

The admiral said he was confident that the U.S. Navy would continue to sail close to China's artificial islands in what are called freedom of navigation missions to reinforce the stipulations of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, although he said such decisions are made in Washington. China greets such cruises with threats and harassment.

Swift also criticized the planned China-Russia drills, saying, "There are other places those exercises could have been conducted."

Also Tuesday, Former Philippine President Fidel Ramos said in Hong Kong that he wants to focus on points of common interest with China, such as tourism and commercial fishing as part of efforts to smooth relations with Beijing roiled by the South China Sea dispute.

A Section on 08/10/2016

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