The Diplomat, an online international news magazine covering
politics, society and culture in the Asia- Pacific, on June 24, published an
article about China’s land reclamation in the East Sea, internationally known
as the South China Sea.
The article “The truth about ‘aggression’ in the South China Sea” was written by Nguyen Hong Thao, an Assistant Professor in Law at the National University of Hanoi, Vietnam. Thao, who also serves at the Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam, has pointed out that China’s bases are clearly of an offensive nature and threaten regional peace and stability. This is why the United States, the G7 and other countries have felt compelled to protest. Vietnam News Agency would like to introduce the full text of the article:
The article “The truth about ‘aggression’ in the South China Sea” was written by Nguyen Hong Thao, an Assistant Professor in Law at the National University of Hanoi, Vietnam. Thao, who also serves at the Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam, has pointed out that China’s bases are clearly of an offensive nature and threaten regional peace and stability. This is why the United States, the G7 and other countries have felt compelled to protest. Vietnam News Agency would like to introduce the full text of the article:
Satellite images showing the extent of land reclamation of China
and Vietnam in South China Sea have sparked debates about who the biggest
aggressor is and what the status quo is.
To be specific, concept of “aggression” is mentioned in the
Resolution 3314 of United Nations General Assembly on the 14th of December,
1972. Aggression is the use of armed force by a state against the sovereignty,
territorial integrity or political independence of another State, or in any
other manner inconsistent with the Charter of the United Nations. The aggressed
Nation has the right to defend itself.
The recent land reclamation work in South China Sea is tied
closely to the issue of sovereignty claims. Historical evidence proves that
Vietnam has been the first state to have administration over the Spratly and
Paracel Islands dating back to at least the 17th century. China, by contrast,
only took interest in the Paracels in 1909 and claimed them as the southern
terminus of its land in 1932. China was also the last country to set foot in
the Spratlys in 1988 after using force to shoot down three Vietnamese ships and
brutally massacring 64 Vietnamese without any weapons in their hands. The
Philippines took interest in Spratlys at the end of 1950s, while Malaysia was
attending to the southern part of these islands in 1980s.
The first step that any sovereign state which has gotten attacked by force would take is reinforcing its garrisons to prevent any violation of its sovereignty. In 1988, Vietnam increased its troops on 21 features in the Spratlys and clearly informed the world that it was doing so. The Philippines has stationed troops on 8 features, China on 9, and Taiwan on 1. Malaysia has increased its occupation from 3 in 1980 to 5 features in 1999.
The first step that any sovereign state which has gotten attacked by force would take is reinforcing its garrisons to prevent any violation of its sovereignty. In 1988, Vietnam increased its troops on 21 features in the Spratlys and clearly informed the world that it was doing so. The Philippines has stationed troops on 8 features, China on 9, and Taiwan on 1. Malaysia has increased its occupation from 3 in 1980 to 5 features in 1999.
In his recent article for The Diplomat, Greg Austin wrote that:
“By 2015, according to the United States government, Vietnam occupied 48
features and China occupied eight”. First, Austin misquoted from the remarks of
U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense, David Shear, on May 13, 2015. Shear
actually said that “Vietnam has 48 outposts,” but Austin reported it as
“features” instead of “outposts” in the initial part of his piece.
Second, it is important to look more closely at the nature of
Vietnamese behavior in the South China Sea beyond just that statistic. For
instance, in 1995, in order to minimize tensions and create favorable
conditions for the settlement of disputes, Vietnam was the first one to call on
other countries of concern to preserve the status quo. More generally, Vietnam
tends to limit the ‘outposts’ on its features to include only some observation
points to ensure proper administration as well as security from foreign
invasion. For example, on Barque Canada Shoal (Bai Thuyen Chai), which is 17
nautical miles long and 3 nautical miles wide, Vietnam has a garrison in the
center and two observation outposts in the two termini of the shoal.
Given this, it is quite unfair to compare Vietnam’s activities in
the South China Sea with that of China’s. According to comments by General
Phung Quang Thanh, on June 1, 2015, Vietnam still maintains outposts in 9
islands and 12 reefs. But having several outposts in one natural feature is not
like reclaiming land to create a feature many times larger than its original
size to build a military complex, as China is doing.
Third, it is important to distinguish China’s activities from that
of other claimants and be clear about the consequences of Beijing’s actions.
The construction by Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia started all before
the conclusion of the Declaration of Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea
signed between China and ASEAN in 2002. They have similarities: they are being
undertaken in islands and reefs naturally surrounded by water at high tide;
they aim to prevent erosion and improve the standard of living, they include
materials being transported from mainland; they occur on features which are
being increasingly civilized and starting to open for tourism; they do not
include heavy weapons; they are meant for defense rather than creating military
bases that can threat other nations; and they are not changing nature of the
feature.
The land reclamation made by China on the low tide elevations
(LTE) far from the Chinese mainland, which is approximately 1000km, has started
since 1988 and has occurred at a very fast pace and huge scale. Satellite
images show that China has been expanding the land reclamation area from 20
hectares to 810 hectares. In Subi, an LTE, the speed of land reclamation from
May to June 2015 is 8 hectares per day, transforming the LTE to a military base
of around 3.87 square kilometers capable of building an airfield strip of about
3km. Remember that the whole area encompassing all islands and reefs in
Spratlys is not more than 10 square kilometers, stretched over the sea area
which is about 160,000 to 180,000 square kilometers.
Besides the scale of these activities, China’s actions are also
negatively impacting the region and infringing on international law. China uses
the biggest dredge ships in the world to destroy the coral reef ecosystem for
extracted material. This damages over 300 hectares of coral reef, creating
initial loss of more than $100 million every year for countries in South China
Sea, in addition of course to the damage to the environment which. And as many
others have pointed out, China’s transformation of LTEs into artificial
islands, followed by demands by the international community to give them the
legal status of natural islands and recognize a 12 nautical mile territorial
sea and even a 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone, violated the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) which China is a party to.
In contrast, Vietnam’s land reclamation is only 0.2% of China’s
land reclamation made as of March 2015. China has declared that construction
work in these LTEs is in the interest of marine protection, marine science
research, and SAR (search and rescue). However, above all, they are designed to
be military bases equipped with heavy guns, ports and airfields. The
consequences of this are quite dire. Given the extent and speed of Chinese land
reclamation, the world has reason to worry about the threat to freedom of
navigation, at least around 12 nautical miles from Chinese construction.
Furthermore, these bases can serve as departure points for Chinese coast guard,
navy, and fishery inspection forces to drive away, shoot, loot and rob
Malaysian, Filipino, and Vietnamese fishing boats, all the while slowly establishing
a ban on fishing in the area and advancing the nine-dash line claim in the
South China Sea.
China’s bases are clearly of an offensive nature and threaten
regional peace and stability. This is why the United States, the G7 and other
countries have felt compelled to protest. If China continues its activities in
the South China Sea, this has the potential trigger an arms race in the region
as smaller nations feel they need to invest more in weapons as the only
guarantee of their security and sovereignty. Because in the South China Sea,
China seems to not only be violating international law, but setting its own
rules.
Source: VNA