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South China Sea Forum

NO, you must leave the area.

Otherwise not a skirmish, but an all-out war may happen.

For that to happen, you must fire first.

If you take the first shot, then China can legitimately respond and push you over.

If you do not, then China will keep asserting sovereignty.

It is a catch 22 for you. Looks like no magic wand from the Yankee so far, other than lip service, which is entertaining.
 
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I guess there are no qualified Vietnamese trainers so Americans are required. After training, time to call some Vietnamese chickens.

They could visit to Dong Guan in Guang dong China in tour, Chinese chickens is good for them.
 
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AFP News – Thu, May 8, 2014


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Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, pictured during a press conference

Japan said on Thursday it was "deeply worried" by China's behaviour in a spat with Vietnam over contested waters, and urged Beijing to rein in its "provocative" actions.

The comment comes after Hanoi said Chinese vessels rammed its patrol ships and turned water cannon on them near a controversial drilling rig in a disputed patch of the South China Sea.

It also comes as Japan and China continue to face off in their own territorial row over a small island grouping in the East China Sea and amid claims that Beijing is becoming increasingly assertive.

"We have strong concerns as there is information that many Vietnamese vessels were damaged and some people were injured," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters in Tokyo.

"We are deeply worried as regional tensions have risen with China unilaterally starting rigging activities in disputed waters" in the South China Sea, the top government spokesman said.

"We recognise this incident is part of China's unilateral and provocative maritime activities," he said.

Suga said China should explain to Vietnam and the international community the basis on which it was acting and added Japan strongly wants China to refrain from provocative moves and "act in a self-restrained manner".

Hanoi said Wednesday that Chinese ships protecting a deep-water drilling rig in disputed waters had used water cannon to attack Vietnamese patrol vessels and had repeatedly rammed them, injuring six people.

Tensions between the communist neighbours have risen sharply since Beijing unilaterally announced last week it would relocate the rig -- a move the United States has described as "provocative".

Vietnam deployed patrol vessels after the China Maritime Safety Administration issued a navigational warning on its website saying it would be drilling close to the Paracel Islands -- which are controlled by China but claimed by Vietnam.

The two countries, who fought a brief border war in 1979, have been locked in a longstanding territorial dispute over the waters, and frequently trade diplomatic barbs over oil exploration, fishing rights and the ownership of the Spratly and Paracel Islands.

China claims sovereign rights to almost the whole of the South China Sea, leading to disagreements with other countries that surround the sea, chiefly with the Philippines, which has proved willing to stand up for itself.

Beijing's dispute with Japan is one of the more volatile flashpoints in regional relations, with both sides deploying paramilitary vessels -- backed at a distance by naval ships -- to the contested Senkaku islands, which China calls the Diaoyus.

The disputes have given common cause to Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam, with Manila particularly welcoming of Tokyo's moves to toughen up its defence stance, which it sees as offering a counterbalance to growing Chinese power.


Japan 'deeply worried' by China-Vietnam maritime spat - Yahoo News Philippines
 
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US fast attack submarine to arrive in Subic Friday
May 9, 2014 12:17am

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A fast attack submarine of the United States will arrive in the Philippines on Friday for a routine port call, state-run Philippines News Agency reported Thursday.

USS Chicago (SSN-721) is a Los Angeles-class submarine. It can support anti-submarine warfare, anti-surface ship warfare, strike, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance.

The submarine's home port is in Guam.

The commanding officer is Cmdr. Lance Thompson, the USS Chicago is part of the US Pacific Fleet and has a crew of 135 sailors.

During its port call, the vessel crew will replenish supplies and engage in rest and relaxation. Joel Locsin/ELR, GMA News
 
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WSJ | May 9,2014

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When China parked a giant oil rig in disputed waters off Vietnam, it confirmed what Washington and regional governments have long feared: Beijing is taking a major leap in the defense of its territorial claims. As Brian Spegele and Vu Trong Khanh report:

At the heart of the latest maneuvering for control in the South China Sea is China’s most modern oil rig, deployed by a state-owned oil company off the contested Paracel Islands over the objections of Hanoi, whose coast guard has sought to obstruct the rig’s work.

The standoff over the rig has built over several days, bursting into open conflict on Wednesday when Vietnamese officials said that about 80 Chinese vessels had moved into disputed areas near it and that six Vietnamese crew members had been injured in scuffles. Rear Adm. Ngo Ngoc Thu, vice commander of the Vietnamese coast guard, said Thursday that the situation at the site remains tense, with many ships still there.

The rig isn't just any piece of equipment; the platform, more than 100 meters high, is China's first deep-water rig, capable of operating in 3,000 meters of water. Launched with great fanfare two years ago, it was billed as a "strategic weapon" for China's oil industry.

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The oil rig is a potential game-changer as it makes possible a long-held Chinese goal: a more aggressive pursuit of oil development close to home.

"The intention has always been there," said Christopher Len, a fellow at the National University of Singapore's Energy Studies Institute, of China's plans to drill in portions of the South China Sea it claims. "Now they have the capability to do so."

But while the dispute centers on the oil platform—and its promise of unlocking the South China Sea's untapped resources—at the heart of the standoff, security analysts say, are much higher stakes around the precedent the standoff may set and whether China's neighbors and the U.S. will allow it to seize control of strategic resources in disputed areas.

China is testing Washington's commitment to aiding regional partners at a time when some in the region fear the Obama administration's focus on Asia is wavering, security experts said.

On his swing through the region last month, U.S. President Barack Obama went to great lengths to reassure allies of America's commitment to them: He told Japan that U.S. security guarantees were absolute and covered a set of East China Sea islands that Japan controls but that China also claims.

In Manila, he called U.S. military support for the Philippines "ironclad," though he left vague whether that extended to aid in the country's island disputes.

His itinerary didn't include Vietnam, despite growing security and diplomatic ties with the former U.S. foe that are in part built on reservations about Chinese power.

The fact that China deployed the rig shortly after Mr. Obama's Asia tour "underlines Beijing's commitment to test the resolve of Vietnam, its [Association of Southeast Asian Nations] neighbors and Washington," wrote security scholars Ernest Bower and Gregory Poling, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Vietnam released footage it said was of a Chinese vessel ramming a Vietnamese Coast Guard ship in the South China Sea as Vietnam tried to prevent the deployment of a Chinese oil rig in disputed waters. Via The Foreign Bureau, WSJ's global news update.


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China has laid claim to much of the South China Sea for decades. Its intent to establish control hasn't changed, security analysts say. But under President Xi Jinping, China's government has begun to more aggressively demonstrate its capabilities, courting more direct conflict with neighbors—trends that have prompted deep worry in Washington. A senior State Department official on a visit to Hanoi on Thursday said the U.S. is "very concerned about any dangers."

"This is indicative of the new style of the Chinese government: that they are willing to push through with their claims through actions," said Mr. Len of the National University of Singapore.

Daniel R. Russel, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs urged all parties involved in territorial disputes in the area to exercise restraint and noted that the U.S. doesn't take a position on any country's claim in the South China Sea.

The islands, reefs and atolls of the South China Sea, and the waters around them, are claimed in whole or in part by six governments. Though the disputes have prevented thorough exploration, energy analysts believe significant reserves of oil and gas lie beneath its seabed.

On Thursday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official said that the decision to deploy the rig was a part of normal Chinese exploration activity in the area, which he said has been ongoing for years.

"We are deeply shocked by Vietnam's disruptive activities," said the official, Yi Xianliang, deputy director-general of the Foreign Ministry's Department of Boundary and Ocean Affairs, at a news conference in Beijing.

Mr. Yi said that between Saturday and Wednesday, Vietnamese ships had rammed Chinese vessels 171 times. He demanded Vietnamese vessels pull back from the area near where the Chinese rig, controlled by state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp., is attempting to operate.

Mr. Yi didn't say if any Chinese crew members had been injured in the incidents, and said he wasn't able to provide a number for the Chinese ships taking part. He said the Chinese navy wasn't involved.

Cnooc's central role in the feud underscores how China's state-owned enterprises are often willing to work in risky areas, particularly when they have backing from Beijing. As much as China needs new energy sources, the objective of the Cnooc rig in the South China Sea goes beyond any potential oil discoveries, according to some security analysts. "A rig offers a purpose for vessels to hold a position," said Elliot Brennan, a research fellow at Sweden's Institute for Security and Development Policy.

—Wayne Ma, Kersten Zhang, and Nguyen Anh Thu contributed to this article.

Write to Brian Spegele at brian.spegele@wsj.com and Vu Trong Khanh at trong-khanh.vu@wsj.com


More
How China Is Using an Oil Rig to Bolster Its Territorial Claims - China Real Time Report - WSJ
 
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Okay , I give up . We use armed fishing ships to protect our rig in spite of we have enough coastguard or navy ships

Get lost !
You'll never get enough ships to cover every inch on open water area ...
 
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Very clever tactic to round up, my friend.

1. Your EEZ is overlapping with our controlled territorial water. The equidistant principle of UNCLOS applied here because of overlapping. The international law regarding overlapping water is to settle diplomatically between two parties. The trouble is you have been reluctant to do it bilaterally. We are forcing your hand, that all, my friend.
2.. It is not illegal. Go look up UNCLOS in reference to our declaration before ratifying. We never accept any country EEZ if it overlaps with our territorial base.
3. We did obey. It's true who misleading fact. Do I need to bring up our declaration before signing off on UNCLOS?

The Court not care about what your declared ... they follow UNCLOS 1982 only ...
And you applied jungle law for inventing nine-dashed-line in 2009
 
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actually this event clearly shows who is friend and who is enemy of Vietnam. We must continue to mobilise the world to our side.

many comments from German media critize the Chinese aggression. here a voice from Germany:

an author of the German think tank "Center for Strategic and International Studies" (CSIS) analyses the situation as follows:

"Undoubtedly, the affected area is controversial. But China's unilateral attempt clearly violates the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

"It is clearly a violation against the general code of conduct of the South China Sea, that China in 2002 with the ASEAN countries, including Vietnam, signed."

"Vietnam is determined to prevent the establishment of the oil rig.

The military potential of Vietnam with the recently purchased Russian submarines of the Kilo-class makes the situation particularly dangerous. Tensions between China and Vietnam have reached the highest intensity since years."

China stellt Vietnam auf eine harte Probe | Asien | DW.DE | 08.05.2014
 
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