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[av_heading heading=’Envoy: Risks rising with China challenging US at sea’ tag=’h3′ style=’blockquote modern-quote’ size=’30’ subheading_active=’subheading_below’ subheading_size=’18’ padding=’10’ color=” custom_font=” av-medium-font-size-title=” av-small-font-size-title=” av-mini-font-size-title=” av-medium-font-size=” av-small-font-size=” av-mini-font-size=” admin_preview_bg=”][/av_heading]
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February 20, 2018
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MANILA ā The risks of a āmiscalculationā and armed conflict have risen in the disputed South China Sea with a militarily stronger China now able to challenge the United States, which used to be the dominant power in the strategic waterway, the Philippine envoy to Beijing said Monday.
Ambassador Chito Sta. Romana said the balance of power was shifting with the two global powers vying for control of the waters, adding the Philippines should not get entangled in the increasingly tense maritime rivalry.
China claims virtually the entire South China Sea, where the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan, and Brunei also have overlapping claims, and it has built seven mostly submerged reefs into islands that reportedly could be used as forward air naval bases and have been installed with a missile defense system.
The US Navy has sailed warships on āfreedom of navigationā operations near the artificial islands, actions China has protested as US intervention in an Asian conflict.
āWhereas before the South China Sea was dominated by the US 7th Fleet, now the Chinese navy is starting to challenge the dominance,ā Sto. Romana told a news forum in Manila. āI think we will see a shift in the balance of power.ā
āIt is not the case, that the South China Sea is now a Chinese lake, not at all,ā Sto. Romana said. āLook at the US aircraft carrier, itās still going through the South China Sea,ā he added, referring to the USS Carl Vinson that recently patrolled the disputed waters and is currently on a visit to the Philippines.
He compared the two powers to elephants fighting and trampling on the grass and said: āWhat we donāt want is for us to be the grass.ā
President Rodrigo Duterteās policy of befriending China has worked, Sto. Romana said, citing Beijingās decision to lift its blockade around the Philippine-occupied Second Thomas Shoal, where the Philippine military could now freely send new supplies to Filipino marines guarding the disputed area.
China has also allowed Filipino fishermen into another disputed area, the Scarborough Shoal, after Duterte visited Beijing and raised the issue with Chinese President Xi Jinping. Xi reportedly told Duterte: āGive me a few days, Iāll take care of this,ā Sto. Romana quoted Duterte as saying about the meeting with his Chinese counterpart a few months after he won the Philippine presidency in 2016.
China took control of the uninhabited atoll off the northwestern Philippines after a tense standoff in 2012.
In January, China accused the US of trespassing when the guided missile destroyer USS Hopper sailed near Scarborough.
President Donald Trumpās administration has outlined a security strategy that emphasized countering Chinaās rise and reinforcing the US presence in the Indo-Pacific region, where Beijing and Washington have accused each other of stoking a dangerous military buildup and fought for wider influence.
Washington has no claim in the South China Sea but has declared a peaceful resolution and freedom of navigation are in its national interest.
US Navy Lt. Cmdr. Tim Hawkins told The Associated Press on board the USS Carl Vinson on Saturday that the Navy has carried out routine patrols at sea and in the air in the region for 70 years to promote security and guarantee the unimpeded flow of trade and would continue to do so.
āInternational law allows us to operate here, allows us to fly here, allows us to train here, allows us to sail here, and thatās what weāre doing and weāre going to continue to do that,ā Hawkins said on the flight deck of the 95,000-ton warship brimming with F18 fighter jets and other combat aircraft. (AP)
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