U.S. Rejects China's Claims in South China Sea
The United States on Monday rejected China's disputed
claims to offshore resources in most of the South China Sea, a move that
Beijing criticised as inciting tensions in the region
and which highlighted an increasingly testy relationship.
China has offered no coherent legal basis for its
ambitions in the South China Sea and for years has been using intimidation
against other Southeast Asian coastal states, U.S. Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo said in a statement.
The U.S. has long opposed China's expansive territorial
claims on the South China Sea, sending warships regularly through the strategic
waterway to demonstrate freedom of navigation there. Monday's comments reflect
a harsher tone. “The world will not allow Beijing to treat the South China Sea
as its maritime empire,” Pompeo said.
The Chinese embassy in the United States said in a
statement dated Tuesday that Washington's accusation is “completely
unjustified...Under the pretext of preserving stability, (the U.S.) is flexing
muscles, stirring up tension and inciting confrontation in the region,” it
said.
Regional analysts said it would be vital to see whether
other nations adopt the U.S. stance and what, if anything, Washington might do
to reinforce its position and prevent Beijing from creating “facts on the
water” to buttress its claims.
The relationship between the United States and China has
grown increasingly tense over the past six months over Beijing's handling of
the coronavirus pandemic, its tightened grip on Hong Kong and its crackdown on
China's Uighur Muslim community.
China claims 90% of the potentially energy-rich South
China Sea, but Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also lay
claim to parts of it, through which about $3 trillion of trade passes each
year. Beijing has built bases atop atolls in the region but says its intentions
are peaceful.
Beijing routinely outlines the scope of its claims with
reference to the so-called nine-dashed line that encompasses about nine-tenths
of the 3.5-million-square-kilometer South China Sea on Chinese maps.