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Ganquan Island 甘泉岛 - Xisha Islands 西沙群岛, South China Sea

Ganquan_Island_-_Xisha_Islands_South_C.jpg

Ganquan_Island_-_Xisha_Islands_South_C.jpg

Location of Ganquan Island 甘泉岛 (marked by a red dot at the topmost image)
part of the Xisha Islands 西沙群岛 in South China Sea

A very recent footage with English commentary on Ganquan Island 甘泉岛, part of the Xisha Islands 西沙群岛 in South China Sea. This tiny yet beautiful island has its own natural source of fresh water. And it has many shipwrecks around its waters, from the ancient time to the modern era... who knows some may contain the lost valuable treasure from the past :victory:
 
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I believe they're the South Vietnamese, the puppet regime of the Washington in Saigon, and it had nothing to do with today's modern Vietnam. Btw, the South Vietnamese simply asked their demise, they launched the military attack on PLA Navy first thinking the US Navy would back them up in their fight against the Chinese but they're terribly wrong then. A blatantly wrong move turned into a deadly one!

I hope the modern Vietnam won't repeat the same mistake as its past South sibling! Accept one's state gracefully and live with reality and do not push one's luck!!
 
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China robbed Island òf Vietnam with force in 1974. this occupation is illegal.
Oh dear, quickly go report matter to your Vietnam People Security and let them investigate. I didn't know that the whole of Vietnam was robbed by China in 1974. BTW when did "Island of Vietnam" become an island.
Hahahahaha
 
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Oh dear, quickly go report matter to your Vietnam People Security and let them investigate. I didn't know that the whole of Vietnam was robbed by China in 1974. BTW when did "Island of Vietnam" become an island.
Hahahahaha

you are Hua chinese Singaporian as I said.

Vietnamese in Germany protest China's militarization of contested waters
By Minh Duc April 25, 2017 | 08:45 am GMT+7
Over 100 protesters gathered to condemn China's actions in the Spratly and Paracel archipelagos.


More than 100 Vietnamese nationals living in Germany took part in a demonstration on Sunday opposite Frankfurt's central station to protest against China's militarization of the South China Sea, which Vietnam calls the East Sea.

Protesters raised Vietnamese flags and German flags as well as banners in Vietnamese, German and English calling for China to halt all actions on Vietnam's Truong Sa (Spratly Islands) and Hoang Sa (Paracel Islands).

They also condemned Beijing's so-called "nine-dash line" and demanded that China comply with international law and respect the verdict of the Permanent Court of Arbitration's tribunal last July. The crowd sang “Noi Vong Tay Lon” (“Join Hands”) and other revolutionary songs to demonstrate their desire to defend Vietnam's sovereignty.

The protest's organizers also sent a letter to the Chinese Consulate in Frankfurt demanding that Beijing end all activities that could cause tension in the South China Sea.

Many Germans took part in the protest in support of Vietnam's policy to resolve disputes by peaceful means and in accordance with international law, and to condemn China's monopolization of the South China Sea.

Participants distributed flyers and brochures to locals and tourists in the area about Vietnam's sovereignty and evidence of China's increased military moves in the South China Sea.

This is the first demonstration by the Vietnamese community in Germany this year, and the sixteenth since China illegally moved an oil platform into Vietnam's waters in 2014.
http://e.vnexpress.net/news/news/vi...litarization-of-contested-waters-3575210.html
 
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you are Hua chinese Singaporian as I said.

Vietnamese in Germany protest China's militarization of contested waters
By Minh Duc April 25, 2017 | 08:45 am GMT+7
Over 100 protesters gathered to condemn China's actions in the Spratly and Paracel archipelagos.


More than 100 Vietnamese nationals living in Germany took part in a demonstration on Sunday opposite Frankfurt's central station to protest against China's militarization of the South China Sea, which Vietnam calls the East Sea.

Protesters raised Vietnamese flags and German flags as well as banners in Vietnamese, German and English calling for China to halt all actions on Vietnam's Truong Sa (Spratly Islands) and Hoang Sa (Paracel Islands).

They also condemned Beijing's so-called "nine-dash line" and demanded that China comply with international law and respect the verdict of the Permanent Court of Arbitration's tribunal last July. The crowd sang “Noi Vong Tay Lon” (“Join Hands”) and other revolutionary songs to demonstrate their desire to defend Vietnam's sovereignty.

The protest's organizers also sent a letter to the Chinese Consulate in Frankfurt demanding that Beijing end all activities that could cause tension in the South China Sea.

Many Germans took part in the protest in support of Vietnam's policy to resolve disputes by peaceful means and in accordance with international law, and to condemn China's monopolization of the South China Sea.

Participants distributed flyers and brochures to locals and tourists in the area about Vietnam's sovereignty and evidence of China's increased military moves in the South China Sea.

This is the first demonstration by the Vietnamese community in Germany this year, and the sixteenth since China illegally moved an oil platform into Vietnam's waters in 2014.
http://e.vnexpress.net/news/news/vi...litarization-of-contested-waters-3575210.html
POOR VIETS... please come over South China Sea :chilli::bounce::victory: ha ha ha
 
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Words won't stop Japanese.
Vietnam has nothing to negotiate with much powerful Japan
Wrong again. Powerful Japan? Japanese pirates only tried one time and never again. I believe we beat them too hard.

I believe they're the South Vietnamese, the puppet regime of the Washington in Saigon, and it had nothing to do with today's modern Vietnam. Btw, the South Vietnamese simply asked their demise, they launched the military attack on PLA Navy first thinking the US Navy would back them up in their fight against the Chinese but they're terribly wrong then. A blatantly wrong move turned into a deadly one!

I hope the modern Vietnam won't repeat the same mistake as its past South sibling! Accept one's state gracefully and live with reality and do not push one's luck!!
You are famous as coward, only good in attacking Vietnam when we face multiple threats from inside and outside. If China is of similar size and population we will slap you one in the morning, one in lunch time and one before we go to bed. And nothing you can't do.
 
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Wrong again. Powerful Japan? Japanese pirates only tried one time and never again. I believe we beat them too hard.


You are famous as coward, only good in attacking Vietnam when we face multiple threats from inside and outside. If China is of similar size and population we will slap you one in the morning, one in lunch time and one before we go to bed. And nothing you can't do.
BUT CHINA IS IN NO WAY OF SIMILAR SIZE WITH VIETNAM!! NO SUCH IF IN THIS UNIVERSE

Read again my earlier lines: "I hope the modern Vietnam won't repeat the same mistake as its past South sibling! Accept one's state gracefully and live with reality and do not push one's luck!!"

I wrote such line (in bold) because the size of China and Vietnam differ very much, no similarity at all! In NO way can Vietnam match China... just look at the mirror but more importantly hang the world map high to remember and memorize it! :coffee:
 
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BUT CHINA IS IN NO WAY OF SIMILAR SIZE WITH VIETNAM!! NO SUCH IF IN THIS UNIVERSE

Read again my earlier lines: "I hope the modern Vietnam won't repeat the same mistake as its past South sibling! Accept one's state gracefully and live with reality and do not push one's luck!!"

I wrote such line (in bold) because the size of China and Vietnam differ very much, no similarity at all! In NO way can Vietnam match China... just look at the mirror but more importantly hang the world map high to remember and memorize it! :coffee:
Yes I know the balance of powers otherwise we will force you to eat all fake maps with silly dotted lines on them.
 
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superiority complex cannot be cured sadly, having big mouths won't change the fact Vietnam was dominated by China for over a 1000 years and when the French arrived (smaller in numbers than the Viets) they turned them into their slaves.
 
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Wrong again. Powerful Japan? Japanese pirates only tried one time and never again. I believe we beat them too hard.


You are famous as coward, only good in attacking Vietnam when we face multiple threats from inside and outside. If China is of similar size and population we will slap you one in the morning, one in lunch time and one before we go to bed. And nothing you can't do.


:)
Some Vietnam people are really funny.
We can't live without them in this forum. either wise it is like a desert.

They have a very brilliant history in their mind and a superpower feeling in their heart.

The only unbreakable power is the USA.
But the Vietnam defeated them badly by themselves.
So actually Vietnam is the Big Brother behind.

Japan Is Becoming Player in South China Sea Sovereignty Dispute
March 20, 2017 4:47 AM
  • Ralph Jennings
F48DA10C-1CF3-45C1-83E0-DD65BE1BD808_cx0_cy1_cw0_w1023_r1_s.jpg

FILE - A helicopter lands on the Izumo, Japan Maritime Self Defense Force's (JMSDF) helicopter carrier, at JMSDF Yokosuka base in Yokosuka, south of Tokyo, Japan, Dec. 6, 2016.

TAIPEI —
Japan is building up its influence in the South China Sea, the most widely contested body of water in Asia, to curb Chinese expansion and garner support for its broader military as well as economic interests.

In May, Japan will send its Izumo helicopter-carrying warship to the South China Sea for three months of port visits in Southeast Asia before directing it onward to the Indian Ocean for drills with the United States, according to the U.S. Naval Institute’s news website.

“You see this warship more as a multipurpose platform,” said Collin Koh, maritime security research fellow at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. “It can do humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. It can do anti-submarine warfare, so a few signals Japan wants to send via this deployment.”

'Causing trouble'

Last week, China’s foreign ministry spokesperson reacted to word about the warship by urging that Tokyo “refrain from causing trouble in the region” and “respect related countries' efforts to maintain peace and stability,” according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

1439D5F0-2A81-4E4E-9841-F9DB31888A7A_w650_r0_s.png

Japan does not claim the South China Sea, a 3.5 million-square-kilometer body of water prized for fisheries and possible undersea fuel reserves.

Six other governments call all or part of it their own, creating friction since the 1960s. Over the past decade China has angered the others by using landfill to expand tiny islets and built military installations on some to fortify its claim to about 95 percent of the sea.

Japan, which does have maritime territorial disputes with Beijing in the East China Sea, will send the ship as part of a longer-term effort to vie with China’s influence in Southeast Asian coastal states while cooperating with the United States to bolster a broader power base in Asia, analysts say.

“Like China and the U.S., Japan is trying to consolidate its role as a leader in the region,” said Jonathan Spangler, director of the Taipei-based South China Sea Think Tank. “Part of this effort involves demonstrating that it has the capacity and courage to operate in areas well beyond its own borders.”

Island-building

The United States hopes to stop Chinese island-building in the South China Sea and ensure freedom of navigation, an agenda that has angered Beijing but found a match in Tokyo.

Japan also cares about the safety of undersea communications infrastructure and China’s compliance with international laws, Koh said.

485782C9-C5D2-4F71-A346-CC5A09259476_w650_r0_s.png

Japan and China dispute the eight uninhabited Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. Analysts say Tokyo’s influence in Southeast Asia, along with its close U.S. security relationship, could draw wider sympathy to its Senkaku claim.

Tokyo controls the islets, which are 200 nautical miles (370 kilometers) southeast of Okinawa and called the Diaoyudao in China. It regularly reports spotting Chinese military aircraft flying over nearby waters.

Japan wants to form a “united front” with Southeast Asian countries, said Carl Thayer, emeritus professor of politics at The University of New South Wales in Australia. Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines contest parts of China’s maritime claims in the South China Sea.

“It does not want the Senkakus to be just an isolated incident. Broader context is China’s assertiveness and growing power in the Indo-Pacific,” he said. “The endgame is stability and getting China to stand down on assertive actions on the Senkakus.”

Economic influence

China and Japan already vie for economic influence in Southeast Asia, a hotbed for investment and a vibrant consumer market of about 600 million people.

Japan has given the region development aid since the 1950s. Last year it pledged to raise the amount. The aid builds political relations while keeping doors open for low-cost investment by Japanese factories.

Vietnam and the Philippines are exploring ways to cooperate with China over the disputed sea, adding urgency for Japan. China offers aid and investment to much of Southeast Asia as well.

79B24DCE-11CE-4B2D-B7EC-5A96CE5102A9_w650_r0_s.jpg

A satellite image shows what CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative says appears to be concrete structures with retractable roofs on the artificial island Fiery Cross reefs, South China Sea, in this image released on February 22, 2017.

Japan’s foreign ministry said last year it hoped China would “comply with” a July 2016 world arbitration court ruling against the Chinese claim to about 95 percent of the sea. The Philippines had filed for the arbitration. China rejected the ruling.

“Japan is continuously proactive in terms of providing assistance to the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) countries in terms of conducting ... patrols in the region and also sending the warships to ASEAN countries, very much in line with their emphasis on the rule-based behavior,” said Andrew Yang, secretary-general with the Chinese Council of Advanced Policy Studies think tank in Taiwan.

China’s dialogue with other countries had “improved” relations in the region, Xinhua said.

Beijing distrusts Japan for what it perceives as an unrepentant stance for its pre-World War Two invasion of mainland China. It also frets over the Japan-U.S. military alliance that U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis reaffirmed in February.

Japanese influence

China is used to Japan’s influence in Southeast Asia, analysts say.

Japan sent three amphibious ships to the Philippines in 2013 for relief after Typhoon Haiyan killed about 6,300 people in the Southeast Asian country.

Last year, Japan gave the Philippines two patrol vessels and said it would lease training aircraft, adding to an earlier offer of 10 coast guard ships to an otherwise militarily weak nation. Japan agreed in 2014 to sell Vietnam six used maritime surveillance vessels and two months ago pledged to sell it six new patrol ships.

The Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said Japan “had inflamed the (South China Sea) issue recently, much to the dissatisfaction of the Chinese people,” Xinhua reported. Unless Japan shifts direction, the news agency said, “China will definitely respond to any action that harms China's sovereignty and security.”

Expect a "continuation" of Japanese military cooperation in Southeast Asia, Thayer said.
http://www.voanews.com/a/japan-player-south-china-sea-sovereignty-dispute/3773376.html



Believe it or not, we hope they get involved.
If they love peace, we can't even find an excuse to beat them.

you are Hua chinese Singaporian as I said.

Vietnamese in Germany protest China's militarization of contested waters
By Minh Duc April 25, 2017 | 08:45 am GMT+7
Over 100 protesters gathered to condemn China's actions in the Spratly and Paracel archipelagos.


More than 100 Vietnamese nationals living in Germany took part in a demonstration on Sunday opposite Frankfurt's central station to protest against China's militarization of the South China Sea, which Vietnam calls the East Sea.

Protesters raised Vietnamese flags and German flags as well as banners in Vietnamese, German and English calling for China to halt all actions on Vietnam's Truong Sa (Spratly Islands) and Hoang Sa (Paracel Islands).

They also condemned Beijing's so-called "nine-dash line" and demanded that China comply with international law and respect the verdict of the Permanent Court of Arbitration's tribunal last July. The crowd sang “Noi Vong Tay Lon” (“Join Hands”) and other revolutionary songs to demonstrate their desire to defend Vietnam's sovereignty.

The protest's organizers also sent a letter to the Chinese Consulate in Frankfurt demanding that Beijing end all activities that could cause tension in the South China Sea.

Many Germans took part in the protest in support of Vietnam's policy to resolve disputes by peaceful means and in accordance with international law, and to condemn China's monopolization of the South China Sea.

Participants distributed flyers and brochures to locals and tourists in the area about Vietnam's sovereignty and evidence of China's increased military moves in the South China Sea.

This is the first demonstration by the Vietnamese community in Germany this year, and the sixteenth since China illegally moved an oil platform into Vietnam's waters in 2014.
http://e.vnexpress.net/news/news/vi...litarization-of-contested-waters-3575210.html

I feel we are in siege now...
What can we do then?
Build more carrier groups for self-protection.


Yes I know the balance of powers otherwise we will force you to eat all fake maps with silly dotted lines on them.


What a lovely child.
There is no balance at all. Just changing powers.
 
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POOR VIETS... please come over South China Sea :chilli::bounce::victory: ha ha ha

Many oversea Vietnamese visited our Island in Spratly, many time.



superiority complex cannot be cured sadly, having big mouths won't change the fact Vietnam was dominated by China for over a 1000 years and when the French arrived (smaller in numbers than the Viets) they turned them into their slaves.

Mongolian , Manchurian and Japanese were smaller numbers than you, Hua Chinese.
 
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Hokkien people is the Guest People in your homeland in China. what does it means ?
You have this habit of assigning homeland to others. Two can play the game. I notice that you talk like an Indian. Do you happen to have Indian ancestry. I suggest you ask your mom about it.
 
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Mongolian , Manchurian andJapanese were smaller numbers than you, Hua Chinese.
So? Do you see Chinese brag about numbers? The one who is talking with a big mouth is Viet. Don't worry when time comes we shall send more of your brethren to join your fallen ones in the depth of SCS. You can volunteer to join them too if you are as brave as the big mouth of yours. We shall continue to haunt you for eternity with the millenium domination and that is the source of your inferiority.
 
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It was never a big problem. The 1st time I visited our Civil Service College, I was so surprised to see so many PRC personnel there for training. Our interest are deeply entrenched as well as large section of the populace have close relatives in China. The Chinese here speak and write simplified Chinese, unlike HK and Taiwan. The relationship may have bumps along the way but will never be impaired.

Well said. There were some people here pinning their hope on an anti-China alliance in this region led by the US. I have always believed that the leaderships in our region has always been more prudent, historical and forward-looking to be played out by the US - than the leaderships, say, in the Middle East. Hence, we may have bumpy relations here and there, but, what we abhor the most is to let our region go into flames while the US watches from a safe distance.

In the end, people killed and people killing will always be the same people in our region. We are so closely and deeply intertwined.

Aha. It looks like both countries have gone past the Terrex incident.

Now, they are back on better terms and holding exchange activities. Good for these two countries.

That's very good. I think the Taiwan weapons sale incident has been handled through silent, backdoor diplomacy. In some instances, keeping the laymen outside the high politics is the best option because large crowds tend to be emotional, short-memoried, and hasty.

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China begins deep-sea probe in South China Sea
Xinhua, April 25, 2017

Chinese scientists embarked on a deep-sea mission in the South China Sea on Tuesday, the beginning of the second stage of China's 38th oceanic expedition.

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Crew members check China's manned deep-sea submersible Jiaolong in Sanya, south China's Hainan Province, April 8, 2017. [Photo/Xinhua]


China's manned submersible Jiaolong with her crew of scientists arrived in the location aboard the mother ship Xiangyanghong 09 on Tuesday.

The submersible is expected to conduct its first South China Sea dive this year on Wednesday if the weather conditions allow, according to Wu Changbin, general commander of the second stage of the expedition.

During the mission, which lasts until May 13, scientists hope to choose a site for experimenting the collection of polymetallic nodules and complete geological and biological surveys.

The 38th oceanic scientific expedition started on Feb. 6. Jiaolong completed a dive in the northwestern Indian Ocean earlier this year in the mission's first stage. It will also conduct surveys in the Yap Trench and the Mariana Trench in the third stage.

Named after a mythical dragon, Jiaolong reached its deepest depth of 7,062 meters in the Mariana Trench in June 2012.
 
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