Experts support US
role in ensuring freedom of navigation in East Vietnam
Sea
U.S
fighter jets on standby at the upper deck of a USS George Washington aircraft
carrier while a U.S. Cowpens ship pass during a media tour in the East Vietnam
Sea, 170 nautical miles from Manila September 3, 2010. Reuters
Most international experts and
scholars reached by Tuoi Tre News
have voiced their support for the US role in exercising freedom of navigation in
the East Vietnam
Sea over recent tensions related to
artificial islands illegally built by China there.
As reported by the Wall Street
Journal on May 12, the U.S.
military is considering using aircraft and naval ships to directly contest
Chinese territorial claims to a chain of rapidly expanding artificial
islands.
According to the report, Defense
Secretary Ash Carter has asked his staff to look at options that include
flying Navy surveillance aircraft over the islands and sending U.S. naval ships to within 12 nautical miles
of reefs that have been illicitly built up and claimed by the Chinese in Vietnam’s
Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelago.
Below are opinions expressed by
several international experts and scholars who study East Vietnam
Sea disputes.
Regional states harassed by China will
welcome this decision if approved
The Obama Administration has not yet
approved officially this recommendation. At a minimum U.S. Navy patrols will
keep China
from asserting de facto control over a maritime area larger than the 12 nm
around each of its features. It is a serious effort to confront China with the fact that if it persists the U.S. will
only stay engaged. Regional states that are harassed by China will
welcome this decision if approved.
I agree with this action and made a
recommendation to this effect in my recent paper published by the U.S. Center
for New American Policy in Washington.
China
and the U.S.
are working for the September summit between Xi Jinping and Barack Obama. China will want to test the U.S. but not
too far to spoil the summit. China
has already completed land reclamation on four or seven features and is now
moving to consolidate its presence by building infrastructure. China will not directly confront the U.S. because
it is risk adverse and does not want to escalate the situation.
China
is adept at moderating its behavior to suit circumstances. China will
complete construction of its infrastructure and only deploy civilian assets
with an emphasis on public goods - weather data, search and rescue. China will try to draw in individual ASEAN countries
in some sort of symbolic activities designed to undermine the U.S.
position. The true test will come at the next meeting of the ASEAN-China
Joint Working Group to Implement the Guidelines of the Declaration on the
Conduct of Parties in the East
Vietnam Sea
later this month. U.S.
pressure might make China
adopt a slightly more cooperative posture, after all China does not want U.S.
involvement in the East
Vietnam Sea
issues.
(Professor Carl Thayer at Australian Defense Force
Academy )
It is for the right reason
The U.S.
needs to reassure these parties and other countries that need transit through
the East Vietnam Sea
that it is a credible force for stability. In addition, the U.S. might be concerned that if China manages to seize control of the East Vietnam
Sea then it will have a
potential stranglehold on one of the most important maritime arteries in the
world.
It is important to note that the U.S. has no intention to seize territory or
maritime space in the East
Vietnam Sea
from any country.
Of the reefs on which China is
building islands, Mischief (đá Vành Khăn), Subi (đá Xu Bi) and Gaven (đá
Gaven) are reportedly naturally below high tide. According to international
law, no country can claim sovereignty over them. Furthermore they are not
entitled to a territorial sea or exclusive economic zone. Artificial islands
built on Mischief and Subi are only entitled to a 500-meter safety zone,
outside of which any country has the freedom of navigation. If China tries
to claim a 12-nautical-mile territorial sea for Mischief and Subi, that will
violate UNCLOS [United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea]. Gaven is
slightly different in that it lies within 12 nautical miles of Namyit Island
(đảo Nam Yết), which means if lighthouses or similar installations which are
permanently above sea level have been built on it, it could be used as a base
point for drawing straight baselines and claiming territorial sea.
The U.S. has a long-standing policy
of deliberately disregarding maritime claims that violate international law.
In the past it disregarded China’s
view on the freedom of navigation in the EEZ [exclusive economic zone]. It is
possible that it will also disregard China’s unlawful claims of
territorial sea by exercising its right to the freedom of navigation. If this
happens, it is most likely that China will respond with actions
that will lead to confrontations such as the Impeccable incident in 2009.
Unfortunately the U.S. is
not an UNCLOS signatory, so it cannot unilaterally take China to
court. This brings us to an important point: if China tries to claim a
12-nautical-mile territorial sea for Mischief and Subi, other UNCLOS
signatories should take it to court. Among other things, that would help to
prevent incidents between China
and the U.S.
The other reefs that China is
building islands on, namely Fiery Cross (đá Chữ Thập), Cuarteron (đá Châu
Viên), Hughes (đá Tư Nghĩa), Johnson South (đá Gạc Ma), and possibly Eldad
(đá Én Đất) (there is conflicting information regarding Eldad), all have
rocks above high tide, which means they are entitled to a 12-nautical-mile
territorial sea. Within the territorial sea there is no freedom of
navigation. Instead, there is the right of innocent passage, which is a more
limited right. This right applies even to military ships and aircraft. No
country has the right to prevent the U.S. from exercising this right
in a way that conforms to UNCLOS within 12 nautical miles of these reefs.
Again, if the U.S. chooses
to do so, China
is likely to respond with actions that will lead to confrontations such as
the Impeccable incident.
However, these hypothetical
confrontations might escalate because the Spratlys area is extremely
sensitive and because any confrontations will be in close proximity to
Chinese air or naval bases.
From the legal point of view, it is
totally justifiable to exercise the freedom of navigation within 12 miles of
Mischief and Subi, and the right of innocent passage within 12 miles of the
other reefs.
If China can also use threats and
coercion to prevent other countries, including the U.S., from exercising the
freedom of navigation and the right of innocent passage, that would cast a
black cloud over the future of the East Vietnam Sea.
I appreciate and back the U.S.’s support for the rule of law in the East Vietnam
Sea and its stance
against coercion, which I think are fundamentally correct. Certainly the U.S. has no intention to violate Vietnam’s
sovereignty or rights. Therefore, if the U.S. chooses to take the actions
that the Wall Street Journal has reported, I believe that it is for
the right reason.
However, the East
Vietnam Sea
disputes are long games, therefore the U.S. and other concerned
countries need a strategy that can go the distance. If the U.S. and other countries could work in
concert, and as part of a long term strategy, to challenge China’s
illegal maritime claims in multiple theaters, that might be better than high
profile confrontations at sea that cannot be sustained.
(Dr. Duong Danh Huy, a UK-based
Vietnamese scholar and expert on the East Vietnam
Sea)
A difficult dilemma for the
U.S.
China's reclamation projects have
created a difficult dilemma for the United States: in order to maintain
credibility among its friends and allies in the region, it will have to make
a firm response which underscores that it is ready to defend freedom of
navigation in the region; however, regional states do not want America
to pursue measures that inflame tensions with China and undermine
regional peace and stability. Finding a middle path between inaction and
escalation is the problem that American policymakers now face.
(Dr. Ian Storey: Senior Fellow, Editor, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies)
China’s
reclamation projects affect regional security order
Vietnam,
the Philippines, the U.S. and other countries are of the view that Beijing’s efforts to
change the status quo through a mixture of coercion, massive reclamation
projects, and the construction of military installations violate
international norms and adversely affect the development of a stable and just
regional security order. In this sense Beijing’s
actions are seen as provocative, whereas the activities of the U.S. military
will be seen as legitimate and commensurate with the aims of maritime
security in the region.
(Dr. Jonathan London, Southeast Asia Research
Center, City
University of Hong
Kong)
Trung
Pham/Tuoi Tre News
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