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Indonesia Rejects China Stance That U.S. Stay Out of Local Waters Dispute

EjazR

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Indonesia Rejects China Stance That U.S. Stay Out of Local Waters Dispute - Bloomberg

Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa rejected China’s stance that the U.S. stay out of territorial disputes in the South China Sea ahead of a meeting of Southeast Asian leaders with President Barack Obama.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations is aware of China’s position “but at the same time the issues on the South China Sea need resolution,” Natalegawa said in an interview today with Bloomberg Television. “Indonesia, through Asean, is keen to ensure we have conditions conducive for negotiations to take place” so disagreements “can be resolved through peaceful means.”

China yesterday signaled for the U.S. to stay out of the spat over territorial waters, portions of which are claimed by Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

The U.S. has asserted a role in the sea vital to world trade to push back against Chinese assertiveness in the region. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the matter “a leading diplomatic priority” at an Asean meeting in Hanoi two months ago. That drew a reaction from China, which prefers to negotiate with claimants on a one-to-one basis.

The dispute comes as China and Japan are locked in a diplomatic row centering on conflicting territorial claims in the same waters. That conflict “reminds all of us that we cannot take for granted the relatively benign atmosphere we’ve had for many decades now in the Asia-Pacific region,” said Natalegawa, who is in New York to attend United Nations meetings.

Talks Stalled

Talks between Asean and China on a code of conduct in the sea have stalled since they agreed in 2002 to resolve disagreements peacefully. In a July filing to the UN, Indonesia said China’s claim to the entire sea “clearly lacks international legal basis.”

Obama has sought to boost security and trade ties with Asean, the fourth-biggest export market for the U.S. His meeting with Asean leaders in Singapore last year was the first- ever a U.S. president has held with the bloc.

This week’s meeting “is a good symbol that the group is a priority for the Obama administration,” said Simon Tay, chairman of the Singapore Institute of International Affairs. “There are, however, questions about the substance of the summit, especially given the domestic priorities for the U.S. President.”

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono will not attend Asean’s meeting with Obama. The U.S. president has postponed a planned trip to his childhood home three times this year, most recently in June because of the Gulf oil spill.

Vision, Partnership


“The fact that certain visits have yet to take place I don’t think is impairing our vision of partnership in the future,” Natalegawa said. “I’m very optimistic that we’re heading into even deeper and wider relations.”

Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim country, and its 231 million people make up about 40 percent of Asean’s population. In July, the U.S. resumed ties with Indonesia’s special forces that were cut 12 years ago because of human rights concerns.
 
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a violent, backwards nation. their air force has less planes than one of our regional airlines. they must be happy trading their country's blood and people for some dog scraps from uncle sam.
 
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Didn't Indonesian navy open fire on a Chinese fishing boat a few years ago?

Some must be worried about the growing Chinese naval power because unless they have U.S backing they can't use the Chinese for target practice anymore.
 
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i did'nt knew local water disputes extends to indonesia(other than china and japan)....b/w how many countries are involved in this Local water dispute
 
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b/w how many countries are involved in this Local water dispute
Lol, I was wondering the same thing. I thought the islands in question were administered by Japan and only after oil was discovered did various countries try to get a hold of them.
 
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Lol, I was wondering the same thing. I thought the islands in question were administered by Japan and only after oil was discovered did various countries try to get a hold of them.

Many, China and Japan, Japan and South Korea, China and South Korea, Southeast Asian countries and Southeast Asian countries, China and Southeast Asian countries
 
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i did'nt knew local water disputes extends to indonesia(other than china and japan)....b/w how many countries are involved in this Local water dispute

Here, this might help..


Spratly Islands dispute

Spratly_Islands-CIA_WFB_Map.png

The Spratly Islands dispute is a territorial dispute over the ownership of the Spratly Islands, a group of islands located in the South China Sea. States staking claims to various islands are: the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China (Taiwan), Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Brunei. All except Brunei occupy some of the islands.
The Spratly Islands are important for a number of reasons: the Spratly area holds significant reserves of oil and natural gas, it is a productive area for world fishing and commercial shipping, and coastal countries would get an extended continental shelf. But some countries, like the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China, and Vietnam make claims based on historical sovereignty over the islands.

Spratly_with_flags.jpg


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Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands Dispute

However, the dispute between China & Japan is over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands.
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The Senkaku Islands also known as the Diaoyu Islands, or the Pinnacle Islands, are a group of disputed uninhabited islands controlled and administered by Japan since 1895, but also claimed by both the Republic of China (Taiwan) and the People's Republic of China as part of Taiwan Province, Toucheng Township in Yilan County since 1971. The United States controlled the islands as part of its occupation of Okinawa from 1945 to 1972.
The islands are located roughly northeast of Taiwan, due west of Okinawa, and due north of the southwestern end of the Ryukyu Islands in the East China Sea.
The islands are a major issue in foreign relations between Japan and the PRC and between Japan and the ROC. The Japanese government regards these islands as a part of Ishigaki, Okinawa Prefecture. Despite the complexity of relations between the two states, both the governments of the Republic of China (Taiwan) and People's Republic of China agree that the islands are part of Taiwan.
 
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It's not a big deal, we haven't big water dispute with indonesia.
What will US navy do if we start exploiting oil in South china sea? nothing..LoL
 
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