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South China Sea Forum

you are funny nanny Eastsea. Look your rice is burning in the kitchen!

Also it as, you are cooking and typing keyboard now, you are worry about your rice. To be care, you will be insulted by your mother if rice is burn.
Note that I don't care about kitchen, my wife's job she cook for me, she set up electric rice cooker, it's finish.

Tell your government to give these separatist a place to stay and form their country in vietnam if you have so much feeling towards them

Our separatists were H'mong people, their homeland in China, they can turn back to China.

you are sleeping with uncle this and uncle that even in your dreams

I said we beating "Uncle" ran away with bloody heads.

Thank heavens we have the safetest nuke plant records in the world

To be carefully, it should happen in any time. All the contractors is big mouth when they can sign the contract with hug amount money and they have been paid enough pension to it.

There another "uncle" obsession again!

The yankies can't do jack on Taiwan. Taiwanese are exploiting the yankies! well done!

Wait for the DPRK's nukes which will land on your roof when you are cooking in the kitchen nanny!

Ya, you let Taiwan sleep with Uncle to get money, well done!
We don't have problem with North Korea now, just you chinese use Korean to discuss with USA to take positive position on region. North Korea can "mistaken" change the direction of nuke to the traitor nearby him.:omghaha:
 
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A very, very interesting article from Yale...

Winning Without a Fight in the South China Sea
Who needs a navy? China launches cruise ships to mark South China Sea claims
Marvin Ott
YaleGlobal, 10 April 2013

China has the largest military in Asia, and expenditures on Chinese navy, coast guard and air force are second only to that of the United States. Still, China is pressing new forces into protecting sweeping claims in the South China Sea – cruise ships and tourists. For decades Chinese maps have shown a U-shaped swathe with dotted lines suggesting maritime claims cutting into 200-mile offshore exclusive economic zones of neighboring states, as protected by the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Nationalistic tensions are rising over the competing claims, with reported incidents of shots exchanged by fishing vessels and patrol boats. The US official position is maintenance of international sea lanes and resolution of territorial disputes without military force, explains Marvin Ott, senior scholar on Asia with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. In a war without battles, China tries to win with tactics like splitting ASEAN members, applying economic leverage, and bolstering legal claims by deploying fishing, research, surveillance and cruise vessels. – YaleGlobal

china-cruise1.jpg

Sovereignty games: China plans to send cruise ships full of tourists to assert control over disputed South China Sea islands (top); Vietnamese protest against Chinese patrol attack on Vietnamese fishermen in what they consider to be their waters

WASHINGTON: China’s launch of its first aircraft carrier caught the world’s attention in 2012. With the reconditioned Russian vessel, China would enforce its extensive claims on the South China Sea, observers speculated, though pressing the Liaoning into active duty was years away.

Earlier this month China introduced of a more effective weapons system to assert its territorial claims – a cruise ship with thousands of tourists. Deployment of a tourist boat along with myriad other vessels to establish its claims in the South China Sea has given new meaning to China’s claim of a “peaceful rise.”

Since the 1950s, Chinese maps have shown nine elongated lines along the coastline of China and Southeast Asia to mark its territorial control. Effort to clarify meaning of that U-shaped line tended to become lost in a miasma of contradictory, confusing statements. Even if intended as a sovereign boundary, the lines were not taken seriously. But in 2009, China submitted that map to the UN as marking its “indisputable sovereignty.” China’s actions since have left no doubt that the most senior levels of the Chinese government view the U-shaped line as a legitimate, enforceable, maritime boundary.

A series of incidents with Southeast Asian neighbors involving Chinese fishing and patrol vessels and strident public claims raised public awareness in July 2010 when US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called on China to resolve the dispute peacefully. China responded by stepping up enforcement capabilities and deploying a smorgasbord of government maritime agencies: the Maritime Safety Administration, the Fisheries Law Enforcement Command, the State Oceanic Administration, and China Marine Surveillance, not to mention the China Coast Guard under the Ministry of Public Security and provincial-level maritime authorities, most notably those of Hainan Island – all distinct from rapid growth of the Chinese navy and air force.

China’s first aircraft carrier received much attention; for the near future it’s not an operational military asset.

China’s first aircraft carrier received much attention, but for the near future it’s a training platform, not an operational military asset. Maritime police in their multiple manifestations are another matter.

Growth of that force is spelled out by the Beijing correspondent for The Los Angeles Times: For example, since 2000 the Chinese military has transferred 11 former warships to the Marine Surveillance agency, which has built 13 ships of its own and plans 36 more. The Fisheries Law Enforcement Command recently took control of a former warship equipped with a helicopter landing pad. Those new vessels are kept busy. The US Pacific Command estimates that the number of long-range patrols by Chinese maritime police in the South China Sea has tripled since 2008. As one US naval officer observed in the Times article, “Chinese maritime surveillance cutters have no other mission but to harass other nations into submitting to China’s expansive claims.” They have cut cables towing Vietnamese sonar arrays, arrested and intimidated Southeast Asian fishermen, harassed US naval vessels and, in one case, erected a barrier to establish China’s exclusive control. These non-naval Chinese vessels are not equipped with military weapons, but demonstrate prowess with water cannons and grappling hooks – sparking frustration and a sense of helplessness among China’s neighboring countries.

China may have shot itself in the foot strategically, but not at the tactical level. Southeast Asian countries lack the capability to match the Chinese on or over the water with military or coast guard assets, a gap in capabilities growing monthly. Bluntly put, Chinese maritime enforcement agencies can muscle other Southeast Asians aside at will – with Vietnamese military outposts being the principle possible exception. Meanwhile, the US has long declared that it takes no position on territorial claims in the South China Sea, insisting on two principles: maintenance of international sea lanes in the area as a “global commons” and resolution of territorial disputes without using military force. By using unarmed coast guard forces to enforce claims, China exploits vulnerability in the US position.

By using unarmed coast guard forces to enforce claims, China exploits vulnerability in the US position.

Consider what happened at Scarborough Shoal, an atoll claimed by the Philippines and much closer to the Philippines than to China. Chinese maritime police prevented Philippine counterparts from arresting Chinese fishermen poaching protected species and then placed a cable across the lagoon that effectively excluded Philippine fishermen from their traditional waters – under the nose of the US Navy, which had no basis for intervening. Scarborough Shoal illustrates an increasingly evident Chinese tactic: Seize a vulnerable outcrop, establish permanent presence and defend it with nonmilitary assets. At this point, there’s little to suggest that Washington has developed, even conceptually, an effective counter.

China’s leverage over Southeast Asia includes a major economic component. As late as the 1990s, the US and Japan were major economic partners of Southeast Asia. No longer – China has displaced both to become the major trading partner to the region – while its investment footprint continues to grow rapidly. The linkages go beyond simply exporting goods, services and money. With the ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement as a centerpiece, China has negotiated a plethora of economic agreements with the region including an array of infrastructure projects linking Southeast Asia with southern interior China. Chinese companies are building impressive rail, road and riverine networks plus power grids and ports – knitting Southeast Asia and China together in an integrated economic unit. It doesn’t take great acumen to imagine how these linkages and related dependencies can be used for strategic leverage and to disrupt other regional ties. At the 2012 ASEAN Foreign Ministers Meeting hosted by Cambodia, a dispute arose when the Philippines insisted that the joint communiqué concluding the gathering contain a reference to Chinese actions in the South China Sea. The Cambodian chairman refused, and the meeting dissolved in acrimony. Cambodian officials privately made it clear that they acted in response to a demand from China, backed by threat of severe economic consequences if Phnom Penh did not comply. In effect, Beijing demonstrated capability to veto any united position in ASEAN regarding the South China Sea.

China’s neighbors don’t dare shoot at a vessel in what they consider their territory if the ship carries tourists.

China’s introduction of a tourist cruise boat in the contested waters presents the region with another challenge. No Southeast neighbors would dare to shoot at a vessel in what they consider their territory if the ship carries civilian tourists.

It can be argued that China’s decision to strip away the veil of ambiguity over its territorial intentions in the South China Sea was a strategic blunder. It’s generated alarm in Southeast Asia, particularly in governments that have their own claims in the area – Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and even Indonesia. It also produced the US “pivot” toward Asia, including statements by the Secretary of Defense that US forces would be redeployed to Asia and those redeployments would be shielded from budget cuts. Governments in Vietnam, the Philippines, Singapore and Indonesia have moved overtly to strengthen security cooperation with the US. A region once broadly relaxed and well-disposed toward China is now very much on edge.

The strategic future of Southeast Asia and its maritime precincts is neither cut and dried nor predictable. China has staked out a dramatic, even brazen, claim, one lacking support in international law, to territory not under its historical control. However dubious the claim may be on merits, China has developed the tactics and leverage to make that claim a first-order strategic challenge to the region and the US.


Marvin Ott is a public policy scholar with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and adjunct professor and visiting research scholar with Johns Hopkins University.

Winning Without A Fight In The South China Sea
 
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Also it as, you are cooking and typing keyboard now, you are worry about your rice. To be care, you will be insulted by your mother if rice is burn.

We dined outside tonight. Have had some very nice dishes of fish, beef and vegies.

Note that I don't care about kitchen, my wife's job she cook for me, she set up electric rice cooker, it's finish.

Thanks for revealing you are a lesbian nanny!

Our separatists were H'mong people, their homeland in China, they can turn back to China.

Ah, dont know this before. Now you have your sore spot to tell!


I said we beating "Uncle" ran away with bloody heads.

you revere usa more than your "uncle" - slavery mindsets


To be carefully, it should happen in any time. All the contractors is big mouth when they can sign the contract with hug amount money and they have been paid enough pension to it.

We are very careful with contractual undertakings. China is getting better!

Ya, you let Taiwan sleep with Uncle to get money, well done!

Taiwanese has all the capabilities and intelligence to take advantage of foreign trades with US and other parts of the world.
Sleeping with americans is your country's expertise.

We don't have problem with North Korea now, just you Chinese use Korean to discuss with USA to take positive position on region. North Korea can "mistaken" change the direction of nuke to the traitor nearby him.:omghaha:

I dont think the Koreans have any trouble with you but it so happens their missiles go astray and land on your roof while you and your wife are cooking. They accidentally help us wipe out the pirates of South China Sea! Hahahah!
 
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Please don't make personal attack, i am not dude, you are not either.

yes, some undisputed now, all the disputes will be solved sooner or later by any means, i don't see US made it undisputed by negotiation.

i agree with you too that war is the only way. so please shut up about internaional laws here and be integrate.

want to act as God , be God first, fortunately fake and selfish God is going down.


Lol if you consider dude is an insult..........AS IF LOL...

Common Sample of Chinese Fail, ask if US territories is legit and got stuff the f'ed up....LOL

World changed, it's isn't 1500 AD anymore, war does not solve dispute, if you want war so badly, why don't you start one already, instead of chest thumping out here.

Also. I ask this to any Chinese member here talking about war. When bullet start flying, are you gonna be the one in front, or you are going to hide behind your sofa and your couch just like an arm chair general you are??

If you talk the talk, PLEASE DO walk the walk, otherwise you are just blowing hot air.

War maybe good to Chinese, it kills off the dumb and dumber
 
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Sigh~ I'm talking "connection" in term of physical claim. The sea between Christmas Island and Mainland Australia do not take into the form of U shaped as what China did.



I don't know which reefs/banks have you been pointing, but from the calculation drawn according to UNCLOS, it is impossible to touch Natuna EEZ:
Go to: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Baselines_of_Eastern_Asia_English.png


There is nothing called "line of control" in UNCLOS, except China unilaterally decided so against UNCLOS it ratified. (which is why I've argued it has become worse than US)

The only control a state might have on the sea is through territorial water entitled by extending 12 nm from coastline or baseline.



I don't see the relevancy here. Christmas Island are Australian territory, but the sea between Christmas Island and Mainland Australia is not Australian territorial/Internal Water. Australian do not demarcate "line of control" between Mainland Australia and Christmas Island. The Australia only has 12 nm territorial water "control" surrounding christmas Island. This is of course comply with UNCLOS

In contrast, the Chinese claim internal/territorial water by its U-shaped claim, which I said does not comply with UNCLOS.



And hence its non-compliance with UNCLOS. UNCLOS states that territorial water as well as EEZ are drawn base on coastal line or baseline connecting outermost islands. If a non-archipelagic states have archipelagoes, its archipelagoes will be treated seperately and be drawn baseline separately from Mainland, as in the case of Australian Christmas Island, which territorial sea are drawn separately from Mainland.



As I said, UNCLOS don't recognize arbitrary line of control on the sea. The actual line of control is the territorial water drawn 12 nm from the baseline either from mainland coatal line or archipelagic baseline.


So why did the Chinese not compliant with UNCLOS in drawing their U-shaped claim? Claiming and Island is different matter as I said, drawing EEZ is different. The fact is, China claim SCS as its internal water (you said it) even before it has asserted its ownership, and thus non-compliance with UNCLOS



I don't say the SCS island ownership dispute can be solved through UNCLOS. I just merely assert that China did not comply with UNCLOS, please read my first post regarding this matter. Claiming an Island also means claiming the EEZ surrounding it, at least when you're claiming an island, the EEZ drawn must be compliant with UNCLOS, which Malaysia, Philippines, and Brunei did. But, in the case of China, even if, I stressed "if", China own the islands, it has chose not to comply with UNCLOS by drawing the 9-dashed line as internal water, an hence arrogant to ignore UNCLOS it ratified.

This is different from Philippines, Brunei, and Malaysia claim. They claim the islands, but they comply with UNCLOS in laying their claim of EEZ if they own the island.

The U-shaped claim as I said is not compliance with UNCLOS. A countries might claim an island with its EEZ defined just like Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei. In Australian example, it claim portion of Antarctic (which no other countries recognize) and the sea surrounding it based on UNCLOS. In this case Australia comply with UNCLOS even if the ownership of Antarctic is disputed.

China didn't even bother to comply to UNCLOS, which is why I said it has become arrogant like US and the point of this lengthy debate.

Well, I am not gonna reply one by one and I probably will not reply you anymore. I don't think we are at the same level.

First of all. Australian Claim of Christmas Island and most US territories Claim is not about a any shape line. Chinese can cliam sovereignty of any island in any dotted line in the world, it does not need to be sparsely nor shaped. It only need to make sense. Since you and me is not a judge, we have no right to reject the claim (the connection) make sense or not. They can claim it, that does not mean they own it. It's neither about any shape line, form or base.

Second of all. The coordinate I gave is Amboyna Cay Island in Spratly chain to north-eastern part of Natuna Island

I did not use name, I punch in the coordinate and according to Wikipedia the Coordinate of Amboyna Cay island is 7.88333°N 112.917°E.

Amboyna Cay - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Now, punch it in with the Google map and see it for yourselves.

Thirdly, I am not talking about UNCLOS. UNCLOS only cover 3 things.

1 Definition of Territorial Water, Contiguous Zone, EEZ
2 What you can do within each and every one
3 How you can settle dispute.

You keep saying the 9 dotted line the Chinese claiming is for it's own EEZ. YOU ARE WRONG. I can show you, you don't need to read the rest of the post but the following part is important.

EEZ only allow the country that have it to enforce it sole right for economic activities, such as fishery, mineral mining. However, it does not give right to the host country to stop shipping. EEZ still have freedom of navigation within, as if it was in international water. The reason why Japan, US and Australia are concern not because they will fish or drill oil in SCS. But they need the shipping lane open. Chinese claim is on the Island itself. Which make the island part of their extended land border, if the claim are successful. It will make the whole SCS Chinese's internal water. BY the China can set their own rule on who have Nav right and who can enter, thus effectively blocked off the whole SCS.

UNCLOS cannot stop China making claim that they own then island. They can only enforce the law on the sea, not on the land.
So UNCLOS is just useless on Chinese claim

Forget about island, forget about the EEZ, if Chinese successfully claim the islands in SCS are their sovereignty, then the whole SCS will be their internal water. And it will as the law is set on UNCLOS. Can they claim the islands or not is not the matter of UNCLOS directly. Which you still believe their claim is based on UNCLOS and EEZ, which is not correct

I don't think you understand my point, or you won't change you mind, and I won't change my mind either, you don't need to reply me anymore or we will just got in to this eternal tangle of you said I said.
 
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We dined outside tonight. Have had some very nice dishes of fish, beef and vegies.

Good luck for you, no chicken, viruse H7N9 is available every where in China now.

Thanks for revealing you are a lesbian nanny!

No ! 断袖之癖 is invented from long time by Chinese.:enjoy:


Ah, dont know this before. Now you have your sore spot to tell!

native land of H'mong people was in China. Chinese copied Ban Co story from them.

you revere usa more than your "uncle" - slavery mindsets

we fought against them, but china kneed and begged USA let you to join to UN.

We are very careful with contractual undertakings. China is getting better!

No evidence for that, just waiting for serious accident could be in near future. You can' sleep well with old technology.

Taiwanese has all the capabilities and intelligence to take advantage of foreign trades with US and other parts of the world.
Sleeping with americans is your country's expertise.

We have been handling with them as invaders, beating them ran away, but you proud for that USA control Taiwan like "ho" and you said that she is "intelligence", it's true Confucius idea now in China.



I dont think the Koreans have any trouble with you but it so happens their missiles go astray and land on your roof while you and your wife are cooking. They accidentally help us wipe out the pirates of South China Sea! Hahahah!

No, they can help us wipe out aggressive neighbor of both from map of world, :omghaha:
 
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As a matter of greatly improved diplomatic, strategic and trade relationship, Russia has promised us to insert a tiny chip into each of these missiles which will cause the rocket engines to veer off from their paths and fall into SCS!
Epic chinamen simpletons. :omghaha:

You no longer buy stuff from Russia, you are currently ripping them off after you receive tech transfer from them. Even India is on its way to become self reliant in weapon production. Is Russia stupid enough to lose a customer like Viet Nam knowing that their Russian's arms market is keep getting smaller?
 
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Lol if you consider dude is an insult..........AS IF LOL...

Common Sample of Chinese Fail, ask if US territories is legit and got stuff the f'ed up....LOL

World changed, it's isn't 1500 AD anymore, war does not solve dispute, if you want war so badly, why don't you start one already, instead of chest thumping out here.

Also. I ask this to any Chinese member here talking about war. When bullet start flying, are you gonna be the one in front, or you are going to hide behind your sofa and your couch just like an arm chair general you are??

If you talk the talk, PLEASE DO walk the walk, otherwise you are just blowing hot air.

War maybe good to Chinese, it kills off the dumb and dumber



ok, the dude

if you are happy to be called dude.

when i asked you the suggestions about disputes, you said war; when i agree with you, you said war is not good. what really you want to say?

or do you say that only US can declare a war on this earth?

or you can not reason rationally like a snake tried to bite his own tail, but i see you posted the longest here, please go and find a shrink.

i have to show a degree of respect for the Vietnamese members, at least they are fighting for their interests here, rather than pretending.

save your hypocritical words.
 
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ok, the dude

if you are happy to be called dude.

when i asked you the suggestions about disputes, you said war; when i agree with you, you said war is not good. what really you want to say?

or do you say that only US can declare a war on this earth?

or you can not reason rationally like a snake tried to bite his own tail, but i see you posted the longest here, please go and find a shrink.

i have to show a degree of respect for the Vietnamese members, at least they are fighting for their interests here, rather than pretending.

save your hypocritical words.

Do you even know what's the black tag on my username mean??

It mean a Military Professional. That mean I was in the Military, may or may not fought a war.

I do not say War is not a good method to solve the problem in SCS. I am just saying, less talking, more acting. You join the Military like me and go fought for your country freedom. Otherwise it's not point pushing war if you are going to ask somebody to fight it for you.

I have seen war, you want to see what I saw??

If you are not going to join the fight to safeguard your national interest, then please talk about peaceful resolution. Otherwise just talking about war here is just getting old. Keep hearing retard Chinese blowing trumpet and talk about war to other nation when he or she him/herself have no idea what a war looks like, except what they saw on the TV.
 
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Philippines' UN appeal on Scarborough standoff will also benefit China - DFA chief

interphoto_1325377010.jpg


MANILA – The Philippines’ request for arbitral proceedings under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) will also benefit China, Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario told his peers in Brunei.

Speaking at the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Bandar Seri Begawan, Del Rosario said that the process will clarify for both the Philippines and China their respective lawful maritime entitlements in the South China Sea under UNCLOS.

This would also help the rising superpower provide responsible leadership toward fostering stability in the region, he said.

“For the Philippines, it will clearly define what is legitimately ours, specifically maritime entitlements under UNCLOS with regards to our fishing rights, rights to resources and rights to enforce our laws within our Exclusive Economic Zone,” the secretary explained.

“For ASEAN and the rest of the global community, the clarification of maritime entitlements under UNCLOS would assure peace, security, stability, and freedom of navigation in the region,” he added.

The secretary seems to be reacting to the views made by Dr. Ruan Zongze, vice president and senior research fellow at the Beijing-based China Institute of International Studies (CIIS) under the Ministy of Foreign Affairs.

In a forum last March, Ruan said China won’t participate in the UN proceedings because China has no basis for participating in that process and would only be negatively affected by its participation. He also said the core issues of sovereignty and territorial integrity cannot be solved by an international arbitration.

Del Rosario also said the proceedings is a peaceful means to resort the conflict.

“The Philippines shall always adhere to the peaceful settlement of disputes through lawful, non-coercive, and transparent means that promote the healthy functioning of an equitable and rules-based international system,” the secretary said.

UN arbitration has no effect on PH position on Code of Conduct


Del Rosario also reiterated that the Philippines’ desire to have a legally binding Code of the Conduct in the South China Sea (COC) has not changed.

“We will continue to work with ASEAN and China in crafting the COC and in implementing our commitments under the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DOC),” the secretary said.

Again, this seems a reaction to Ruan’s view that going to the UN would derail the drafting and the adoption of the COC.

To ASEAN, which is said to issue a statement on the conflict in the South China Sea, Del Rosario urged the regional bloc to focus on solidarity in taking a stronger position on violations of the DOC.

Philippines' UN appeal on Scarborough standoff will also benefit China - DFA chief - InterAksyon.com
 
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PH to stick with arbitration under UNCLOS to pursue Spratly claims
By Jerry E. Esplanada
Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines reiterated, on Thursday, its commitment to the peaceful settlement of its claims in the West Philippine Sea or the South China Sea area through arbitration proceedings under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, or UNCLOS.

Speaking before the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ foreign ministers meeting in Bandar Seri Begawan, Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario emphasized on Thursday, that “the Philippines’ recourse to arbitration is firmly rooted in the tradition of good global citizenship.”

“The Philippines shall always adhere to the peaceful settlements of disputes through lawful, non-coercive and transparent means that promote the healthy functioning of an equitable and rules-based international system,” said the Department of Foreign Affairs head.

Del Rosario asserted that Manila’s arbitration initiative, “when objectively considered, will benefit all parties.”

“For the Philippines, it will clearly define what is legitimately ours, specifically maritime entitlements under the UNCLOS with regards to our fishing rights to resources and our right to enforce our laws within our Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ),” he said.

For China, “an arbitration award will finally clarify its lawful maritime entitlements in the South China Sea,” he pointed out.

“This will enable China to provide responsible leadership towards fostering stability in the region,” according to Del Rosario.

At the same time, he reiterated that “the Philippines’ desire to have a legally binding Code of Conduct in the South China Sea has not changed.”

“We will continue to work with ASEAN and China in crafting the COC and in implementing our commitments under the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DOC),” he said, adding ASEAN should “focus on solidarity in taking a stronger position on violations of the DOC.”

In a related development, the DFA said China had yet to respond to the Philippines’ request for clarification of its new maritime rules in the West Philippine Sea.

Beijing “did not reply to our note (verbale),” Assistant Secretary Raul Hernandez told the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

Sometime in late December, China sent its first patrol vessel to disputed parts of the West Philippine Sea ahead of its enforcement of new rules that authorized Chinese border police to board search and expel foreign vessels from waters Beijing considers its territory.

The patrol chief Haixun 21 reportedly sailed into the high seas under the administration of the Maritime Safety Administration of Hanan Province from which China administers the West Philippine Sea.

Del Rosario then said that if the reports proved correct, the Philippines would ask the Chinese why they were patrolling and in what areas.

The new rules came into effect on January 1, but ASEAN nations and the United States had asked China for clarification on their purpose and extent.

China claims almost the entire West Philippine Sea, but the Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam and Brunei claim parts of the sea within their EEZs. Taiwan also claims some islands in the same sea.

The Philippines and Vietnam are the more strident claimants, both pressing for the resolution of their claims according to UNCLOS and for a code of conduct in the region to prevent the conflicting claims from erupting into armed clashes.

25-nine-dashed-line-in-the-south-china-sea.jpg
 
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PH to stick with arbitration under UNCLOS to pursue Spratly claims
By Jerry E. Esplanada
Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines reiterated, on Thursday, its commitment to the peaceful settlement of its claims in the West Philippine Sea or the South China Sea area through arbitration proceedings under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, or UNCLOS.


dude, time to grow up, as a founding member of UN, do you seriously believe UN treaties are used to protect thug states like PH?
 
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