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Emboldened Vietnam And Philippines Risk Escalating Conflict Again With China Over South China Sea

Chellam

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Both Vietnam and the Philippines have restarted either drilling or exploring for oil in contested waters in the South China Sea – risking the ire of China and representing a shift in strategy for dealing with contesting claims.

Pushing back in the South China Sea

Through their actions both Vietnam and the Philippines have challenged China’s claims to parts of the South China Sea. Vietnam has been drilling for oil and has also extended an Indian oil concession in contested waters, while the Philippines has begun exploring for oil and announced that drilling may resume before the end of the year. This represents a shift in policy for both nations who had put new ventures on hold since 2014 to avoid escalating conflicts with China. The South China Sea is key for a wide variety of reasons including security, its fisheries, its natural resources, and as a trade route. Its importance has caused numerous small scale conflicts between the parties laying claim to the area while also drawing in other major powers, such as the US, Japan and India, who seek to constrain China.

A new confidence

The Philippines and Vietnam are likely emboldened by the burgeoning alliances between the US, Australia, India, Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines. In various combinations, these parties have been developing strategic partnerships and collaborating in order to push back against China’s growing presence in the South China Sea. Despite their own conflicting claims in the region, Vietnam and the Philippines held confidence building exercises in June on the Southwest Cay of the Spratley Islands. These exchanges were held in 2014 and 2015 but not last year as Rodrigo Duterte, the president of the Philippines, sought to promote greater engagement with China. In this context, the resumption of exercises may represent the winding down of a Chinese appeasement policy under Duterte. This year’s exercises were held on one of the contested features once held by the Philippines but now held by Vietnam and thus are a show of unity in the face of conflicting territorial claims. More importantly, they represent a desire to collaborate on security measures as China ramps up its militarization of islands in the South China Sea. Lacking a NATO style alliance in Southeast Asia, military exercises such as these show China that it cannot easily divide and conquer. Although it may simply be coincidence, the exercises, held on the 22nd of June, occurred the day after Vietnam began its drilling and only three weeks before the Philippines announced the potential resumption of its own drilling. Vietnam sought to court the support of other powers capable of constraining China such as Japan and India. In June, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc visited Japan where both parties pledged to plan for the future of Vietnam-Japan defence cooperation. They also confirmed a loan that would support Japan’s provision of Vietnam with six new patrol boats. It is understood that Vietnam has renewed Indian oil concessions for strategic reasons: to make China more hesitant to take direct action against such ventures and to give India a greater stake in the security of the region. Vietnam invited India to play a greater role in the South China Sea. At recent meeting between India and ASEAN, the Vietnamese Foreign Minister said, “we hope India will continue to partner our efforts for strategic security and freedom of navigation in the South China Sea on the basis of international law and legal convention.”

Risks of escalation

The resumption of ventures into the South China Sea is arguably necessary to challenge China’s growing presence, but it is nonetheless fraught with risk. China has already cancelled a defence meeting with Vietnam and is likely looking for an appropriate response to this development. If China is to respond, it will be unilaterally since its claims to the waters have already been dismissed by arbitration courts. This raises the chances of escalation. Perhaps the softest option for China would be to respond with its own drilling activities in areas claimed by Vietnam. This tit-for-tat option, however, would fail to live up to China’s claims to the territories being drilled in by Vietnam. The alternative would be directly challenging these installations with blockades or other military actions. China’s dredging projects and military installations in the South China Sea would facilitate such direct action. It is not clear if the recent spate of collaboration activities is directly connected to Vietnam and the Philippine’s ventures into the South China Sea. It is clear, however, that the region is becoming increasingly aligned against China and its militarization of the contested waters

http://globalriskinsights.com/2017/07/vietnam-philippines-dive-back-contested-waters/
 
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It started.
What India has done in Dokhlan is the starting point of push back by all SCS nations.
All they needed was a leader who can show these countries that there is some one backing them and India has done it.

China by their bluster and no action has been exposed very badly. The Chinese are stretched thin and know if they move their assets to India for India, they will get slaughtered in the east.
They have been exposed and there is no way out for China.
 
India has shown others how to tame the dragon.but they should not get carried away, they are small countries,the best will be a collective approach by smaller nations.
 
It started.
What India has done in Dokhlan is the starting point of push back by all SCS nations.
All they needed was a leader who can show these countries that there is some one backing them and India has done it.

China by their bluster and no action has been exposed very badly. The Chinese are stretched thin and know if they move their assets to India for India, they will get slaughtered in the east.
They have been exposed and there is no way out for China.

You talk like if India is capable to compete with China over Geo-politic equation, China can set counter-containment of US and we fear of India?....LMAO. But if China decide India Ocean is China's Ocean, India sure will be piss...we will challenge India in regional domination, see who shall prevail.

India has shown others how to tame the dragon.but they should not get carried away, they are small countries,the best will be a collective approach by smaller nations.

India shown nothing to these nations other then vent their frustration over CPEC, NSG, Masood :rofl:, most of these nations are tamed by China even with US's backing...India is nothing by a joke of 21st century.
 
India shown nothing to these nations other then vent their frustration over CPEC, NSG, Masood :rofl:, most of these nations are tamed by China even with US's backing...India is nothing by a joke of 21st century.
I know it has been bad last few days ,we understand. you can vent all your frustration with posts like these .
 
It started.
What India has done in Dokhlan is the starting point of push back by all SCS nations.
All they needed was a leader who can show these countries that there is some one backing them and India has done it.

China by their bluster and no action has been exposed very badly. The Chinese are stretched thin and know if they move their assets to India for India, they will get slaughtered in the east.
They have been exposed and there is no way out for China.
ok I want to understand this logic. This is so popular and I have no idea why.

What is the difference, I mean ACTUAL difference between China having a chicken a and kitten on the east coast relative to 5 million men.

China has nukes, even without those, would countries attack China because China doesn't have anything in a particular place?

You are confusing war times with peace time, America has military where it is easy for them to move it, China has more or less the same system, just because a force isn't somewhere, doesn't mean it cannot be there very quickly.

There would be no difference in China's east coast if China moved every soldier and equipment west, and vice versa.

Also, 12 trillion dollars in GDP and 200 billion in army spending means China doesn't need a way out. By itself it is equal to 5 India, and India is equal to however many Philippines and Vietnam, who even cares. Fun fact, both have higher GDP per capita than India.
 
If it gives you some console after more than a month of humiliation.:-)
What humiliation? Look at the Bhutanese reply on the Facebook or YouTube. All blame India control their country and hope to set up diplomatic relationship with China.
 
What humiliation? Look at the Bhutanese reply on the Facebook or YouTube. All blame India control their country and hope to set up diplomatic relationship with China.
You mean,Chinese pretending to be from Bhutan right.:-)
What next ,after trying everything in the book .I guess it will be please go back
 
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