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Vietnam, Japan to hold first ever naval exercise in the South China Sea

Did you just sign in mod acct and delete your posts and my posts.
 
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So did the Vietnamese send a canoe or rowboat?

Yes, this canoe is joined to exercises.

ki_lo_1_1.jpg
 
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Threads not about Genetics. Kindly refrain from those posts.
Sir,

Thanks for your intervention. Some trollers here are keen to bring up such annoying topic into discussion again and again. you shouldn't hesitate banning them. Especially the well-known troller and liar with hidden racism agenda, desperately linking the Viet to an imaginary Mon-Khmer people. You know whom I mean.

Respectfully,

Viet
 
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Sir,

Thanks for your intervention. Some trollers here are keen to bring up such annoying topic into discussion again and again. you shouldn't hesitate banning them. Especially the well-known troller and liar with hidden racism agenda, desperately linking the Viet to an imaginary Mon-Khmer people. You know whom I mean.

Respectfully,

Viet
I think you are dangerous and immature for asking some Chinese mod to ban your Viet fellows because you are disagree with him.
 
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I think you are dangerous and immature for asking some Chinese mod to ban your Viet fellows because you are disagree with him.
the person isn´t a viet. he is a chinese nationalist.
 
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the person isn´t a viet. he is a chinese nationalist.

You are really an immature kid. Hu songshan already said move along and stop derailing threads with your personal vandetta, yet you are tagging him to do exactly that. Grow up and move along already.

Now you are still trying to retaliate against me for saying things about you that was true, that you are China wannabe, and disgrunted because I have shown how the Kinh are distant from the Han. Now you go really low by fabricating lies saying I’m a Chinese nationalist just to get other Vietnamese member to hate me and asking Mod to ban me. You are truly an immature kid.

Since you still call me a liar, I’ll post your own posts proving that you indeed are a Chinese wannabe:


where do the Kinh come from?
there are many theorems, but the most creditable source (Havard Medicin School) says they came from Taiwan 5,000 years ago...

so in short, as you ask: what is the link between the Kinh and the Han?
after the Han migrated and settled down in Taiwan 15,000 years ago, and they made the journey from Taiwan to Vietnam 10,000 years later.

Source: Anti-Vietnam Sentiment against Vietnamese with Chinese Citizenship living in China | Page 2


and if nobody has noticed, we have a defacto leader already in place, that isn´t even a member of Asean: China.

in contrast to Indo, China has everything that needs to fullfill the job: economic clout, tons of money, diplomacy and military power. she can bribe Cambodia or other members every year to sabotage any unfriendly agenda. she makes huge investments in the region. chinese warships will soon outnumber sharks in the SC Sea. yes, there is a chance: China will be the only country, that would be accepted as leader of the club. by all members including Vietnam.

Source: Is Asean Losing Its Way? | Page 7

So I suggest you end your immature antic here and stop derailing this thread because you are only exposing your true colors here.
 
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Japan Warships Could Visit Vietnam Naval Base Near South China Sea in 2016


Japanese vessels will be allowed to make port calls in a Vietnamese naval base facing the South China Sea next year, the two countries agreed following defense consultations November 6.


According to Japanese media outlets, Japanese defense minister Gen Nakatani and his Vietnamese counterpart Phung Quang Thanh agreed during a meeting in Hanoi that Japan Maritime Self Defense Forces (MSDF) vessels will be allowed to make port calls in Cam Ranh Bay, a deep-water harbor in central Vietnam that is alongside the South China Sea. Hanoi is currently building a facility for foreign vessels which is scheduled to open next year. Japanese officials also reportedly said they hope that the port call will occur sometime in 2016.



The agreement comes as Japanese security forces have been increasing their activities in the South China Sea amid simmering maritime disputes there to which Vietnam is a claimant. The MSDF participated in a humanitarian drill with the United States and the Philippines off Subic Bay in August and held an exercise with the U.S. Navy north of Borneo last month (See: “
Interview: The Future of U.S. Military Exercises in the Asia-Pacific”). Separately, Japan is also currently seeking a visiting forces agreement with the Philippines–another South China Sea claimant–that would make it just the third nation to get access to Philippine military bases following the United States and Australia (See: “Japan, Philippines Seeking New Pact on Military Bases”).


The two countries also discussed several other measures to boost defense cooperation. Most notable was agreement on the first ever joint naval exercise between the MSDF and the Vietnamese navy. Japan has already been boosting maritime security assistance to Vietnam over the past few years as part of its intensified engagement with ASEAN states under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (See: “
Japan’s ASEAN Charm Offensive”): in August 2014, Japan’s foreign minister Fumio Kishida pledged to donate six vessels to Vietnam to help strengthen its maritime safety (See: “Japan Gifts Vietnam Patrol Vessel Amid South China Sea Tensions”). But joint naval drills between the two nations would be a notable first in their so-called extensive strategic partnership.


China’s growing assertiveness in the South China Sea dispute has undoubtedly been a key driver in Japan-Vietnam security cooperation. Hanoi has been on the receiving end of several aggressive moves by China, including a tense standoff over Beijing’s installation of an oil rig inside Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in 2014. In that regard, a point not missed by most observers was the fact that the boost to Japan-Vietnam defense cooperation came as Chinese president Xi Jinping was visiting Vietnam. The move was yet another demonstration of Hanoi’s desire to maintain a close relationship with its northern neighbor in spite of tensions while also bolstering ties with other actors including Japan and the United States.



To be sure, despite this recent boost to defense ties, there are still challenges to more forward-leaning measures that some have been calling for, including Japanese participation in joint patrols in the South China Sea together with other allies and partners like the United States (See: “
US-Japan Joint Patrols in the South China Sea?”). But given the firsts we have seen in defense cooperation in the Asia-Pacific over the past few years, including between Japan and Vietnam, it is little wonder that so much ink has been spilled forecasting the potential new engagements and alignments that could occur further down the line (See: “The Future of US-Japan-Vietnam Trilateral Cooperation”).


Reference: The Diplomat
 
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