China's land reclamation in East Vietnam
Sea grows: Pentagon
report
An
aerial photo taken though a glass window of a Philippine military plane shows
the alleged on-going land reclamation by China on mischief reef in Vietnam's
Truong Sa (Spratly) Islands in the East Vietnam Sea on May 11, 2015. Reuters
China has reclaimed more land in Vietnam’s Truong Sa (Spratly)
islands of the East Vietnam Sea
than previously known, according to a new Pentagon report, which says Beijing is also
completing construction of a runway on one of its seven man-made outposts.
Once the airstrip on Fiery Cross Reef is operational, China could
potentially use it as an alternative runway for carrier-based planes,
allowing the Chinese military to conduct "sustained operations"
with aircraft carriers in the area, the report said.
China's sole aircraft carrier, a Soviet-era ship bought from Ukraine and refitted in China, has carried out exercises in the East Vietnam
Sea but is not yet
fully operational.
Some experts believe China will deploy domestically
built carriers by 2020 as part of plans to develop an ocean-going "blue
water" navy.
At the reclamation sites in Vietnam’s
Truong Sa (Spratly) islands where China is in the building phase,
it has excavated deep channels and constructed new berthing areas to allow
access for larger ships, said the report, called the Asia-Pacific Maritime
Security Strategy.
"The infrastructure China
appears to be building would enable it to establish a more robust power
projection presence” into the East
Vietnam Sea,
it added.
Since China's
land reclamation efforts began in December 2013, it had reclaimed more than
2,900 acres (1,170 hectares) of land as of June 2015, the report said. U.S.
officials had previously put the total at 2,000 acres.
In a statement, China's
Foreign Ministry said China
had "completed the relevant island and reef area reclamation
project" at the end of June.
Construction activities were "completely within the scope
of China's
sovereignty", it added.
In early August, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Beijing had halted land
reclamation.
China says the outposts will have undefined military purposes, as
well as help with maritime search and rescue, disaster relief and navigation.
China claims most of the East
Vietnam Sea,
through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year. The Philippines, Vietnam,
Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei also have overlapping
claims.
The reclamation campaign significantly outweighed efforts by
other claimants in size, pace and nature, said the Pentagon report.
China had reclaimed 17 times more land in 20 months than the other
claimants combined over the past 40 years, accounting for approximately 95
percent of all reclaimed land in Vietnam’s Truong Sa (Spratly)
islands, it added.
"China
is unilaterally altering the physical status quo in the region, thereby complicating
diplomatic initiatives that could lower tensions," said the report.
REUTERS/TUOI TRE NEWS
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