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China forms missile brigade for South China Sea

luckily they turned back, he he.
bill of US$ wasted for this showbiz, it's better if chinese govt taken it to care about 300 mill chinese are living in poverty.
 
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haha,say that to your government,average Chinese are way more wealthier than poor Vietnamese,if we live in poverty,then you can say that Vietnamese dont even have a life.
 
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he he, but Manchus don't have his own country, home land, you are poorer than me.:D

Everybody recognizes Manchuria (e.g. a Japanese-created fiction) as part of China. You're an idiot and out of step with the rest of the world.

Show me any decent-sized country that recognizes Manchuria as a separate nation. You can't, can you? Dolt!
 
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He he, don't bullying us with such fake toys.
1. it can get explosive at start.
2. Fake Automatic control system may drive it fly to Peking or Shang hai, Guangzhou ...
:agree:

Are you so afraid of the missile brigade that you start throwing assumptions that will not happen? These missiles will land on your a$$ if VN continues to provoke China. If a war breaks out and none of us will see any replies from you again then we can assume the missiles did their jobs, that's how "fake" they are to you. :)
 
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Everybody recognizes Manchuria (e.g. a Japanese-created fiction) as part of China. You're an idiot and out of step with the rest of the world.

Show me any decent-sized country that recognizes Manchuria as a separate nation. You can't, can you? Dolt!

It's very funny that the only the can do is write repetitive sentences. With no proper education and real facts on history the only thing he can do is repeat Manchukuo in almost every reply. Manchuria was never a nation and Manchukuo was just a puppet state for a short period of time. He is forgetting one thing and that is Manchu people consider themselves as Chinese and are spread throughout China. They too have fought against Vietnam and will kill these VN soldiers if a war breaks out. So it's a big joke hearing this guy telling Manchu to go against China when these Manchus are gonna slaughter them.
 
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Everybody recognizes Manchuria (e.g. a Japanese-created fiction) as part of China. You're an idiot and out of step with the rest of the world.

Show me any decent-sized country that recognizes Manchuria as a separate nation. You can't, can you? Dolt!

Manchukuo map.

images


Manchu Kuo Flag from Manchu communist. Only color is changed inversion of Flag of Viet.:enjoy:

images
 
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China's missile and rocket technology is one of the best in the world.as the top manufacturer and industrial power, maybe she is the only country in the world which can mass produce missiles and rockets.
 
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China's missile and rocket technology is one of the best in the world.as the top manufacturer and industrial power, maybe she is the only country in the world which can mass produce missiles and rockets.

Kudos.. u just gave away what an average thinks like... when u people have no logical claims u try to establish by parading some fancy weapons :tdown:
 
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South China Sea: Vietnam sees greater Indian role

Hanoi: Vietnamese Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Nguyen Van Thao has hoped that India would echo a strong voice in the region to help Vietnam resolve the South China Sea dispute peacefully and as per international laws.

China is involved in long-running disputes with Vietnam and the Philippines about ownership of the South China Sea and its myriad, mostly uninhabited, islands and atolls. Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei also have claims.

Speaking to mediapersons in Hanoi on Friday, Nguyen Van Thao thanked the Indian Government for supporting the peaceful dialogue process, initiated by the Vietnamese government, to resolve this dispute.

The South China Sea issue has picked up momentum ahead of ASEAN Summit scheduled to begin in Cambodia later this week.

The South China Sea is potentially the biggest flashpoint for confrontation in Asia, and tensions have risen since the United States adopted a policy last year to reinforce its influence in the region.
 
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Ἀπόλλων;3153195 said:
South China Sea: Vietnam sees greater Indian role

Hanoi: Vietnamese Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Nguyen Van Thao has hoped that India would echo a strong voice in the region to help Vietnam resolve the South China Sea dispute peacefully and as per international laws.

China is involved in long-running disputes with Vietnam and the Philippines about ownership of the South China Sea and its myriad, mostly uninhabited, islands and atolls. Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei also have claims.

Speaking to mediapersons in Hanoi on Friday, Nguyen Van Thao thanked the Indian Government for supporting the peaceful dialogue process, initiated by the Vietnamese government, to resolve this dispute.

The South China Sea issue has picked up momentum ahead of ASEAN Summit scheduled to begin in Cambodia later this week.

The South China Sea is potentially the biggest flashpoint for confrontation in Asia, and tensions have risen since the United States adopted a policy last year to reinforce its influence in the region.

SCS can and will not be some one's playground.. It will be an international highway with viets overlooking the operations there due to their historical ownership of that place !!
 
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Amid the escalating dispute over territorial waters in the South China Sea, China’s rivals are toying with a simple idea: change the name of the sea.

A petition drive from Vietnam to change the South China Sea’s name to the Southeast Asia Sea is gaining followers. Meanwhile, the Philippines has another proposal.

“When people keep referring to the South China Sea, there is a subliminal message that this sea belongs to a country whose name appears in the name,” Commodore Miguel Jose Rodriguez, Armed Forces spokesman, said recently, according to the Philippines Inquirer. “We in the Philippines should call it West Philippine Sea
 
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China’s sovereign claims in East Sea groundless: int’l scholars

International scholars have affirmed that there is no legal foundation for China’s declaration of sovereignty over almost all of the East Sea area and that its U-shaped line is unreasonable.

They emphasised this at a seminar entitled “The East Sea and Asia Pacific in Transition: Exploring Options for Managing Disputes” in Washington DC on June 28.

The event, held by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), focused on recent developments in the East Sea, the East Sea in the ASEAN-US-China relations, and assessment of significance of the East Sea in a changing regional landscape.

The role of international laws and norms in resolving and managing disputes as well as resolution and policy recommendations to boost security and cooperation in the East Sea were also considered.

Professor Carlyle Thayer from the Australian Defence Force Academy said oil and gas blocks in the area that China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) has recently advertised for international tender in fact belong to Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone and continental shelf.

He said the Vietnam National Assembly’s recent adoption of the Law on the Sea is a positive development as it is necessary for the country to exploit their offshore resources. He affirmed that Vietnam required the new laws because marine industries will make up 50 percent of its GDP by 2025.

According to the senior expert, China’s U-shaped line, created in 1948, is not legal because it was drawn before the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) was signed in 1982.

At the seminar, Dr. Tran Truong Thuy, Director of the Centre for East Sea Studies under the Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam, presented a map of the nine blocks in the East Sea, reaffirming that it is within Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone and is not a disputed area.

Dr. Bonnie Glasser, a CSIS expert in Asia, urged that any company which wants to submit a bid for developing resources through a Chinese proxy operating within Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone should think twice before making up their mind because it may raise concerns and these companies are likely to face high risks.

For his part, Kunt Campell, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, stressed that the US opposes any use of force to handle disputes in the East Sea.

Scholars shared the view that ASEAN should play an important role in settling disputes in the East Sea.
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/en/politics/24214/china-s-sovereign-claims-in-east-sea-groundless--int-l-scholars.html
 
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