What's new

South China Sea Forum

The Philippines' South China Sea Memorial: Sailing into the Wind
PhilippinesflagREGULAR.jpg


The Philippines has put its disputed territorial claims before an arbitration tribunal in The Hague. According to Gregory Polin, Manila’s arguments against China’s ‘nine-dash line’ and rival claims are entirely justified. It’s now up to the tribunal to weigh in and convince Beijing of these ‘facts’.

By Gregory Poling for Pacific Forum CSIS

Editor's note: This article was reposted from PacNet #28 published by Pacific Forum CSIS and originally appeared in "Southeast Asia from Scott Circle" on April 3, 2014.


On March 30, the Philippines submitted a memorial detailing its arguments and evidence against China's nine-dash line and other aspects of Beijing's South China Sea claims to an arbitration tribunal at The Hague. The 10-volume, nearly 4,000-page document marks a bold step by Manila, and one that Beijing seems to have believed never would actually happen. The Philippines chose the right course. Now the international community must weigh in and convince China of that fact.

China has refused to take part in the case since it was first brought by the Philippines in January 2013. It has also exerted considerable pressure on Manila to abandon the arbitration proceedings. As the deadline for the memorial approached and pressure failed to alter the Philippine position, Beijing switched to the carrot. It reportedly offered Manila incentives to drop the case, including trade benefits and a mutual withdrawal of ships from Scarborough Shoal, which China occupied in April 2012. But the Philippines did not budge. An incident near a reef in the Spratly Islands on March 29 helps explain why.

Second Thomas Shoal is a submerged reef, part of which breaks the waterline at low tide. It lies on the Philippines' presumed continental shelf but, like every feature within the nine-dash line, is claimed by China. The Philippine Navy intentionally grounded the BRP Sierra Madre on the reef in 1999 to garrison troops as a deterrent to further Chinese expansion in the area.

Every few months for 15 years, the Philippine Navy has sent fresh troops and supplies to Second Thomas Shoal. Last year, with memories of the Scarborough Shoal seizure still fresh, Chinese ships began regularly patrolling near Second Thomas and harassing Philippine ships that approached. It escalated these provocations in early March by running off a vessel carrying supplies and, allegedly, construction materials, for the Filipino garrison. Manila responded by dropping supplies to its troops from the air.

On March 29, the Philippines sent another ship, but this time it invited foreign press along to document the Chinese response. The resupply ship was harassed by a Chinese Coast Guard vessel that demanded it leave the area and repeatedly turned across the smaller boat's path, forcing it to veer away to avoid a collision - all while foreign journalists watched. Eventually the Philippine ship entered shallower waters and escaped, delivering long-overdue supplies and troops to replace the garrison at Second Thomas Shoal.

The incident underscored a lesson that the Philippines learned well after Scarborough Shoal: China has no intention of compromising on its claims, restricting them to the bounds of international law, or treating fellow claimants as equal parties to the disputes.

Despite frequent insistence from Beijing that its claims in the South China Sea are based on international law and encompass only the "islands and adjacent waters" within the nine-dash line, Chinese actions tell a different story. Second Thomas Shoal is not an island or even a rock. It is a low-tide elevation that is not subject to any independent territorial claim under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea or customary international law. The shoal belongs to whomever has sovereignty over the continental shelf on which it rests - by all indications the Philippines.

China has not restricted its underwater claims to the continental shelf of the Philippines. In January three Chinese ships patrolled James Shoal, a completely submerged feature on Malaysia's continental shelf, and held a ceremony swearing to defend Chinese sovereignty over it. Where Beijing makes tenuous legal arguments for its claims to Scarborough Shoal and disputed islets in the Spratlys, it offers none for its claims to Second Thomas or James Shoal.

Such claims, along with increasingly aggressive tactics by Chinese maritime forces, have pushed more complacent nations closer to the Philippine position. Malaysian officials have grown increasingly vocal in meetings with ASEAN counterparts since the Chinese patrols at James Shoal. Even in Indonesia, which had previously tried to distance itself from the dispute, officials appear to be growing concerned. On March 12, an official with the office of the coordinating minister for political, legal, and security affairs acknowledged that the nine-dash line does in fact illegally overlap Indonesia's exclusive economic zone north of the Natuna Islands. Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa tempered that statement a week later, but reiterated that Indonesia considers the nine-dash line unacceptable. Officials in Jakarta seem to be recognizing that, if allowed, Beijing will stake claim to everything within the nine-dash line - islands, waters, and the seabed beneath.

Negotiations have failed so far to make much progress on managing, much less resolving, the South China Sea disputes. No other claimant has the military capabilities to resist determined Chinese aggression, the Philippines least of all. And the United States will not intervene militarily except in the case of an outright act of war. That leaves the Philippines only one recourse - the law. Manila is paying a cost for its case, but it has correctly determined that the cost of complacency would be higher.

Many of the Philippines' neighbors, including Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam, have vouched for Manila's right to pursue legal action but have shied away from more forthright support for the arbitration case. Extraregional players have been more vocal, especially Japan and the United States. The US government grew more explicit in its criticism of the nine-dash line this year, with Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Russel calling it illegal during testimony before Congress. On the same day that the Philippines filed its memorial, the State Department issued a press statement supporting the effort for "greater legal certainty and compliance with the international law of the sea."

US support for the Philippines' case against China is about more than supporting a treaty ally or curbing the atavistic tendencies of a rising power. It is about defending an international system of law and norms. Nearly every nation, including China, is a signatory to the Law of the Sea. Even those that have not ratified it, including the United States, operate under its rules. And the most fundamental of those rules have been recognized by the International Court of Justice and others as customary international law.

Nations large and small have restricted their maritime claims to the bounds of international law, even in those areas where they consider themselves to have a special prerogative, such as the Caribbean for the United States and the Arctic for Russia. If China, by virtue of size or force of arms, is free to ignore that framework, then the entire edifice risks being discredited. And no nation, China included, would find its security and prosperity better served by a return to the pre-20th-century system of might-makes-right relations.

Whether the arbitration tribunal will find that it has jurisdiction in the Philippines' case is uncertain. But if it does, the judges will rule at least partially in the Philippines' favor. That ruling will not restrict China's claims to above-water features in the nine-dash line, but it will likely invalidate its claims, such as to Second Thomas Shoal, that clearly violate customary international law.

Beijing maintains that it will not abide by any such ruling. The Philippines can only hope to protect its interests by pursuing the case anyway. That leaves the international community, and the United States in particular, to convince China that preserving the international rule of law and playing the part of a responsible power will serve its interests better than will thumbing its nose at the community of nations.

Gregory Poling is a fellow at the Sumitro Chair for Southeast Asia Studies at CSIS. This article originally appeared in "Southeast Asia from Scott Circle" on April 3, 2014.

The Philippines' South China Sea Memorial: Sailing into the Wind / ISN
 
.
Dismounting China from the South China Sea
China's growing energy needs and overlapping territorial claims place its energy security on a collision course with its smaller, weaker neighbors

China's economy requires increased access to resources, especially when managing the needs of approximately 20% of the world's population.

China's growing energy needs and overlapping territorial claims in the resource-rich South China Sea place their energy security on a collision course with its smaller, weaker neighbors.

The most recent issue is China's increasingly hard-lined approach to the Scarborough Reef, approximately 4 times farther away from China than it is to the Philippines.

Historic lens

China backs its South China Sea claims through a Chinese map produced in 1947, Chinese Foreign Minister Zhou Enlai’s 1951 statement, and the discovery of the Belitung Wreck in 1998.

Please make your own opinions regarding the legitimacy of a map created in 1947 citing a historical claim. Minister Zhou’s statement denounced the San Francisco Peace Treaty – as China was not invited – and further declared Chinese ownership of the Spratly, Paracel, and Pratas Islands.

Furthermore, Beijing portrayed the Belitung Wreck as “[Tang Dynasty] artifacts at the bottom of [Indonesian coastal waters],” however failed to mention that the dhow (a lateen-rigged ship with one or two masts) was not a "Chinese vessel that had a seafaring purpose in the region," but is instead debated to have been an Arabian or Indian ship.


Even if it was a Chinese trade ship, a sunken vessel possibly lost at sea doesn’t really pass the legitimacy test for a territorial claim.

Legal lens

In addition to questionable historical interpretations, China tries to strengthen its claims with outdated legal decisions.

In 2010 and again in 2013, China attempted to gain ownership of up to two-thirds of Okinawa’s continental shelf by arguing Okinawa was a former Chinese vassal state and cited the 1969 North Sea Continental Shelf Case ruling to strengthen its cause.

However, this form of coastal delineation was superseded by the 1973 to 1982 drafting of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which replaced the natural prolongation argument with the 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ) – as demonstrated in 1982 (Libya v. Tunisia) and again upheld in 1985 (Malta v. Libya).

Additionally, Article 12 of UNCLOS defines islets as land masses incapable of sustaining life and therefore ineligible for EEZ status. Without this EEZ status, they cannot be used by Beijing (or any other country) to create a maritime boundary, such as Beijing’s Nine-Dash Line.

However, when we look at the Philippines’ and other countries’ disputes with China, we start to see some legitimacy of ownership. For example – the obvious distance factor aside – some countries have had prior habitation on the islets, whereas China has not.

Additionally, several of the claimant countries either have developed or are exploring ways to develop tourism (beaches, diving, fishing, etc), which assert possession over the area.

Other avenues have included deploying military contingents or setting up civilian communities on these islets to demonstrate physical occupation.

These countermeasures are in addition to the 1994 decision, determined by UNCLOS Article 121, which created international maritime boundaries – that China chooses to ignore.

Combined, these cursory examples prove Beijing lacks solid historical, occupational, and legal claims in the region.

Ways forward

Beijing’s branding of the South China Sea as one of its “core interests” will only compound matters.

Previous “core interests” include Taiwan, Tibet, and the former East Turkmenistan and generally means China will refuse to negotiate where they would need to concede territory; use force to protect their interests; and impose a regional order – an obviously bleak picture.

Moreover, China’s modus operandi for dealing with territorial claims is a 3-pronged approach; which includes delays in dispute resolution, consolidation of claims, and preventing the opposing country from strengthening their claims.

To many Asia-Pacific observers, Beijing’s heavy-handed approach is reminiscent of the “middle kingdom,” a time in China's imperialistic past when rulers, emboldened by the “mandate of heaven,” threatened and subdued all non-Chinese nations if they failed to pay tribute or showed deference.

Which is why China was angered when the Philippines didn’t back down and instead filed their territorial dispute in the Permanent Court of Arbitration on March 30, 2014.

To maintain regional stability, everyone’s motivation needs to be understood. For example, China’s hard-line approach may be rooted in the fact that it is 80 to 90% dependent on foreign oil; has a massive, growing population; and the Communist Chinese Party leadership must deliver continued high-growth to maintain its position.

On the other hand, as Dana Dillon suggests, China is viewed as the neighbor on the street who tries to own your yard, your driveway, and your mailbox, but allows you to keep your house.

Mainland China should be more like Taiwan – in April 2013 Japan and Taiwan concluded a fishing agreement surrounding the disputed Senkaku islands.

Following Taiwan's lead, Mainland China can prove that is dedicated to the Rule of Law and is not simply a reincarnation of the Middle Kingdom.

Instead of increasing tensions with the possibility of a mistaken calculation leading to conflict, Taiwan and Japan sat down, discussed their fishing requirements, and signed an agreement.

Their territorial dispute remains unsolved; however, both sides enjoy the new status quo and prove that even when a dispute exists, so too does an amiable solution for both sides.

Thus, we have a golden opportunity for China and the Philippines to work together, demonstrate that they support the Rule of Law and are capable of solving problems in a legal and friendly fashion. – Rappler.com

Dismounting China from the South China Sea

The article fails that both the Republic of China and France each launched competing claims to the Spratly Islands in the 1930s, but the Spanish and then American ruled colonial Philippines never claimed the Spratlys.

The Philippines only found out about the Spratlys when Tomas Cloma claimed he discovered the Spratly islands as "Terra nullius" in 1947 - a blatant lie, because China and France were already claiming and garrisoning the islands. The Philippines only began claimined the Spratlys in the 1970s when President Marcos "bought" Cloma's claim to the islands for one peso.

Vietnam Joins the World - Google Books

Where in the World is the Philippines?: Debating Its National Territory - Rodolfo Severino - Google Books

The Law of the Sea and Northeast Asia: A Challenge for Cooperation - Hŭi-gwŏn Pak - Google Books

Spratly Islands (reefs, South China Sea) -- Encyclopedia Britannica

The British found Chinese fisherrmen from Hainan on the Spratly islands in the 19th century. They then launched the first formal legal claim to the islands.

Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Military History - Larry M. Wortzel, Robin D. S. Higham - Google Books

War Or Peace in the South China Sea? - Google Books

Security and International Politics in the South China Sea: Towards a co ... - Google Books

Taiwan named Vietnam as the number one threat in the Spratly islands.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NH10Ad01.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NF13Ad01.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/JB22Ad02.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/CHINA-01-140213.html

Vietnam is viewed as the primary enemy in Taiwan's military exercises in the Spratlys.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/LG29Ad03.html

Photo: Taiwan military exercises with Vietnam as an imaginary enemy generals admit Taiping Island - Military News

Taiwan to conduct live-fire Taiping Island drill in Sept. - The China Post

Vietnam Demands Taiwan Cancel Spratly Island Live Fire Drill - Bloomberg

Vietnam's angry at Taiwan as it stages live-fire drill in the Spratlys

Vietnam protests Taiwan's fire drill exercise plan on island | Politics | Thanh Nien Daily

Vietnam protests Taiwan’s fire drill exercise plan on island — Vietnam Breaking News

Even Lee Tung-Hui, who is pro-Japanese and pro-Independence, loudly attacked the Philippines over its claims to the Spratlys and said that Taiwan would assert its rights to the entire archipelago.

China News: Asia Times Online is a quality Internet-only publication that reports and examines geopolitical, political, economic and business issues. Cheap Holiday Packages

And to emphasize Taiwan's newly declared sovereignty, the Taiwanese Foreign Ministry issued a statement on July 13 proclaiming Taiwanese sovereignty over the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. The statement condemned recent Philippine and Malaysian activities on the islands and declared that the Spratlys and the entire South China Sea belong to Taiwan ''legally, historically, geographically, or in reality."

You will not find one Taiwanese, even pro-independence Hoklo and Hakka Taiwanese, give up its claim to the entire Spratly islands and they reject all the other southeast asian countries claims. Many of them- I am talking about pro-independence Taiwanese here- in fact hold largely negative stereotyps and views of most southeast asians, including Filipinos.
 
.
Both of OP's 'articles' are from the discredited neocon think tank CSIS, one of the primary agitators that spread rumors about Iraqi WMDs to justify US invasion. Educated people wouldn't dare associate themselves with such toxic sources, OP must not understand his humiliation right now. Can't OP diversify his propaganda sources? Or maybe he can't act without his propaganda overseer's permission?
 
.
The debate is how can China claim entire "South China Sea" that too most of the claims are of 1940's.

Philippines has submitted their case based on UNCLOS and the Island proximity based on the law. How can any one claim a sea??

Even the islands were named after "Spartly" an englishmen.

China never governed these islands and some of them are uninhabitable. Accept the truth that CCP is not in any position to explain its nine dashed line except giving meaning less and comic warnings.

The article fails that both the Republic of China and France each launched competing claims to the Spratly Islands in the 1930s, but the Spanish and then American ruled colonial Philippines never claimed the Spratlys.

The Philippines only found out about the Spratlys when Tomas Cloma claimed he discovered the Spratly islands as "Terra nullius" in 1947 - a blatant lie, because China and France were already claiming and garrisoning the islands. The Philippines only began claimined the Spratlys in the 1970s when President Marcos "bought" Cloma's claim to the islands for one peso.

Vietnam Joins the World - Google Books

Where in the World is the Philippines?: Debating Its National Territory - Rodolfo Severino - Google Books

The Law of the Sea and Northeast Asia: A Challenge for Cooperation - HÅi-gwŏn Pak - Google Books

Spratly Islands (reefs, South China Sea) -- Encyclopedia Britannica

The British found Chinese fisherrmen from Hainan on the Spratly islands in the 19th century. They then launched the first formal legal claim to the islands.

Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Military History - Larry M. Wortzel, Robin D. S. Higham - Google Books

War Or Peace in the South China Sea? - Google Books

Security and International Politics in the South China Sea: Towards a co ... - Google Books

Taiwan named Vietnam as the number one threat in the Spratly islands.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NH10Ad01.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NF13Ad01.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/JB22Ad02.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/CHINA-01-140213.html

Vietnam is viewed as the primary enemy in Taiwan's military exercises in the Spratlys.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/LG29Ad03.html

Photo: Taiwan military exercises with Vietnam as an imaginary enemy generals admit Taiping Island - Military News

Taiwan to conduct live-fire Taiping Island drill in Sept. - The China Post

Vietnam Demands Taiwan Cancel Spratly Island Live Fire Drill - Bloomberg

Vietnam's angry at Taiwan as it stages live-fire drill in the Spratlys

Vietnam protests Taiwan's fire drill exercise plan on island | Politics | Thanh Nien Daily

Vietnam protests Taiwan’s fire drill exercise plan on island — Vietnam Breaking News

Even Lee Tung-Hui, who is pro-Japanese and pro-Independence, loudly attacked the Philippines over its claims to the Spratlys and said that Taiwan would assert its rights to the entire archipelago.

China News: Asia Times Online is a quality Internet-only publication that reports and examines geopolitical, political, economic and business issues. Cheap Holiday Packages



You will not find one Taiwanese, even pro-independence Hoklo and Hakka Taiwanese, give up its claim to the entire Spratly islands and they reject all the other southeast asian countries claims. Many of them- I am talking about pro-independence Taiwanese here- in fact hold largely negative stereotyps and views of most southeast asians, including Filipinos.
 
.
The article fails that both the Republic of China and France each launched competing claims to the Spratly Islands in the 1930s, but the Spanish and then American ruled colonial Philippines never claimed the Spratlys.

The Philippines only found out about the Spratlys when Tomas Cloma claimed he discovered the Spratly islands as "Terra nullius" in 1947 - a blatant lie, because China and France were already claiming and garrisoning the islands. The Philippines only began claimined the Spratlys in the 1970s when President Marcos "bought" Cloma's claim to the islands for one peso.

Vietnam Joins the World - Google Books

Where in the World is the Philippines?: Debating Its National Territory - Rodolfo Severino - Google Books

The Law of the Sea and Northeast Asia: A Challenge for Cooperation - HÅi-gwŏn Pak - Google Books

Spratly Islands (reefs, South China Sea) -- Encyclopedia Britannica

The British found Chinese fisherrmen from Hainan on the Spratly islands in the 19th century. They then launched the first formal legal claim to the islands.

Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Military History - Larry M. Wortzel, Robin D. S. Higham - Google Books

War Or Peace in the South China Sea? - Google Books

Security and International Politics in the South China Sea: Towards a co ... - Google Books

Taiwan named Vietnam as the number one threat in the Spratly islands.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NH10Ad01.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/NF13Ad01.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/JB22Ad02.html

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/CHINA-01-140213.html

Vietnam is viewed as the primary enemy in Taiwan's military exercises in the Spratlys.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/LG29Ad03.html

Photo: Taiwan military exercises with Vietnam as an imaginary enemy generals admit Taiping Island - Military News

Taiwan to conduct live-fire Taiping Island drill in Sept. - The China Post

Vietnam Demands Taiwan Cancel Spratly Island Live Fire Drill - Bloomberg

Vietnam's angry at Taiwan as it stages live-fire drill in the Spratlys

Vietnam protests Taiwan's fire drill exercise plan on island | Politics | Thanh Nien Daily

Vietnam protests Taiwan’s fire drill exercise plan on island — Vietnam Breaking News

Even Lee Tung-Hui, who is pro-Japanese and pro-Independence, loudly attacked the Philippines over its claims to the Spratlys and said that Taiwan would assert its rights to the entire archipelago.

China News: Asia Times Online is a quality Internet-only publication that reports and examines geopolitical, political, economic and business issues. Cheap Holiday Packages



You will not find one Taiwanese, even pro-independence Hoklo and Hakka Taiwanese, give up its claim to the entire Spratly islands and they reject all the other southeast asian countries claims. Many of them- I am talking about pro-independence Taiwanese here- in fact hold largely negative stereotyps and views of most southeast asians, including Filipinos.

Vietnam Nguyen Dynasty controlled Islands for many hundreds year ago. China KMT claimed it from 1947.
 
. .
The debate is how can China claim entire "South China Sea" that too most of the claims are of 1940's.

Philippines has submitted their case based on UNCLOS and the Island proximity based on the law. How can any one claim a sea??

Even the islands were named after "Spartly" an englishmen.

China never governed these islands and some of them are uninhabitable. Accept the truth that CCP is not in any position to explain its nine dashed line except giving meaning less and comic warnings.

Read. The Republic of China is in Taiping (Itu Aba island) and explorered and claimed the Spratly archipelago before the Philippines was even an independent country.

Vietnam Joins the World - Google Books

Where in the World is the Philippines?: Debating Its National Territory - Rodolfo Severino - Google Books

The Law of the Sea and Northeast Asia: A Challenge for Cooperation - HÅi-gwŏn Pak - Google Books

Spratly Islands (reefs, South China Sea) -- Encyclopedia Britannica

Vietnam Nguyen Dynasty controlled Islands for many hundreds year ago. China KMT claimed it from 1947.

And somehow the British found zero Vietnamese, but instead found Chinese fisherrmen from Hainan on the islands. This was in the 19th century when the Nguyen dynasty was still in power.

Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Military History - Larry M. Wortzel, Robin D. S. Higham - Google Books

War Or Peace in the South China Sea? - Google Books

Security and International Politics in the South China Sea: Towards a co ... - Google Books
 
.

This Island was used as stopgap Island by Chinese fishermen during their voyages, The point here is you only control or claim a territory when you administer it.

Japanese are the first to administer this Island by making this a municipality.

Secondly how can China claim a sea based on a tiny island which is less than 1 Km??

How can China warn any ships passing on International waters??

Don't you think CCP is over reacting??

Both of OP's 'articles' are from the discredited neocon think tank CSIS, one of the primary agitators that spread rumors about Iraqi WMDs to justify US invasion. Educated people wouldn't dare associate themselves with such toxic sources, OP must not understand his humiliation right now. Can't OP diversify his propaganda sources? Or maybe he can't act without his propaganda overseer's permission?

I do not work for cents to entertain a master .... I post articles based on my interests and current affairs.

Guys who work for propaganda department and for money know how to diversify the sources and how to spread lies. The guys who trained you should have told you that if the article has valid points then it is worth discussing.

Seems payments are being delayed these days ... frustration is evident in every post ..... :lol:

Chinese talk about humiliation and abuses, that is what their society is all about and that is what CCP will go through in the near future.
 
Last edited:
.
This Island was used as stopgap Island by Chinese fishermen during their voyages, The point here is you only control or claim a territory when you administer it.

Japanese are the first to administer this Island by making this a municipality.

Secondly how can China claim a sea based on a tiny island which is less than 1 Km??

How can China warn any ships passing on International waters??

Don't you think CCP is over reacting??



I do not work for cents to entertain a master .... I post articles based on my interests and current affairs.

Guys who work for propaganda department and for money know how to diversify the sources and how to spread lies. The guys who trained you should have told you that if the article has valid points then it is worth discussing.

Seems payments are being delayed these days ... frustration is evident in every post ..... :lol:

Chinese talk about humiliation and abuses, that is what their society is all about and that is what CCP will go through in the near future.

I challenge you to find where China claimed the entire South China Sea as its territorial waters. It deliberately did not say that the nine dash line represented a maritime boundary for territorial waters.
 
. .
Remove the nine dashed line what else is left in the sea??

Ownership_Claims-Middlebury.gif

Nine dash line is to show the extent of China's claims of the islands, while showing a it linked in a contiguous manner to mainland China on a map. China obviously and definitely does not claim the big mass of water northwest of Luzon island of the Philippines, there aren't even islands in that area. China has also not blocked any international shipping through the South China Sea.
 
.
Nine dash line is to show the extent of China's claims of the islands, while showing a it linked in a contiguous manner to mainland China on a map. China obviously and definitely does not claim the big mass of water northwest of Luzon island of the Philippines, there aren't even islands in that area. China has also not blocked any international shipping throug the South China Sea,

This is a lie from you Dude!!

China not only claims the sea but also warning its neighbors who are doing fishing and oil exploration.

India is doing oil exploration near to Vietnam

b81e0_untitled-2-copy_400.jpg


India warned against exploring oil in disputed South China Sea - The Times of India

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MJ05Ae03.html

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424127887323717004578157033857113510
 
.
This is a lie from you Dude!!

China not only claims the sea but also warning its neighbors who are doing fishing and oil exploration.

India is doing oil exploration near to Vietnam

b81e0_untitled-2-copy_400.jpg


India warned against exploring oil in disputed South China Sea - The Times of India

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MJ05Ae03.html

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424127887323717004578157033857113510

China challenged exploration only within the EEZ (Exclusive Economic zone) of the disputed islands, whoch extend a few hundred miles from the islands themselves. It did not claim the entire South China Sea or all the waters in the nine dash line as Chinese territorial waters. FYI, the EEZ of the Spratlys would not cover alot of what is in the nine dash line, such as the waters Northwest to Luzon island where there aren't any islands
 
.
China challenged exploration only within the EEZ (Exclusive Economic zone) of the disputed islands, whoch extend a few hundred miles from the islands themselves. It did not claim the entire South China Sea or all the waters in the nine dash line as Chinese territorial waters. FYI, the EEZ of the Spratlys would not cover alot of what is in the nine dash line, such as the waters Northwest to Luzon island where there aren't any islands

I have given the proof about Indian ONGC exploration in Vietnam SEZ and Chinese warning !!
 
. .
Back
Top Bottom