Perhaps
emboldened by the actions of its western neighbour in Crimea, China
made a major move last week in South China Sea, after years of tough
talk and bullying around with smaller peripheral ASEAN nations. On
first of May, Vietnamese vessels on patrol, discovered a Chinese oil
rig stationed 130 nautical miles off the coast of Vietnam. It was
about 119 nautical miles off Ly Son Island in Quang Ngai Province.
According to Vietnam, it was a clear violation of Viet Nam's
sovereignty. On 4th
May 2014, when Vietnamese patrol boats tried to intercept the Chinese
oil rig, Chinese escort ships with air support, intentionally
collided and rammed two Vietnamese Sea Guard vessels and fired water
cannons at Vietnamese vessels, causing damage. At least six
Vietnamese sailors have been injured in the past few days.
As
Vietnamese demanded the removal of the rig, instead of defusing the
situation, Chinese further increased the complications by dispatching
80 ships to the area, including seven naval vessels. Dozens of navy
and coastguard vessels from both countries are now in the area, where
China has deployed the giant rig. For any one, who is familiar with
Chinese tactics, it would be clear that Beijing is trying to impact
its foot print in the area for the first time. China perhaps is the
only country in the world, which has territorial disputes not only
with many of its neighbours, but also with countries that are located
far away from its borders. Besides major overland disputes with India
and Vietnam, Chinese having been claiming almost entire South China
Sea as its own territory and even some islands presently held by
Japan in East China Sea.
China
has taken an official stance that it has sovereignty over all of the
South China Sea, which happens to be an important sea lane for global
commercial traffic. Chinese maps show an imaginary dashed line with 9
dashes that encloses about 90 percent of the 3.5 million square
kilometers of South China Sea as part of China. Even though this line
was first claimed by Chinese Government in 1947, no other country
objected to it then. Chinese Government submitted a territorial claim
for the area of the South China Sea, falling within the 9- dashed
line, on May 7, 2009 to the UN. Immediately, the Philippines lodged a
diplomatic protest against China for claiming the whole of South
China Sea illegally. Vietnam and Malaysia filed their joint protest a
day after. As things stand, Chinese claim is being contested not
only by Vietnam and Philippines but by other ASEAN countries like
Taiwan, Brunei and Malaysia. Indonesia joined this group when China
extended the range of South China sea disputes even further last year
by claiming part of Indonesia’s Riau Islands province as its own
territory by including it into its so called 9 dash line.
In
spite of all the claims made by it, China had never tried to station
any ship in the disputed parts of the sea, though Chinese ship
continued to sail through often. With last week's action, China's
strategy of maintaining status quo and only launching verbal claims,
seems to have undergone a major change. International experts also
note the fact that the Chinese have moved ahead in placing their oil
rig immediately after President Barack Obama’s visit to four Asian
countries in late April. This clearly shows Beijing's intentions to
test the resolve of Vietnam, other ASEAN members and above all
Washington.
China
might have calculated that with developments in Ukraine, Nigeria and
Syria, Washington may be unwilling to back up strong security
assertions made to Japan and the Philippines during President Obama’s
trip. An oil industry official in China, on condition of anonymity,
confirms this when he says that the decision to position the rig
appears to be a political decision rather than a commercial one. He
adds that this decision reflects the will of the central government
and is also related to the U.S. strategy on Asia.
After
it noticed the Chinese rig, representatives from the Foreign Ministry
of Vietnam met representatives of the Chinese Embassy in Ha Noi and
handed over a ministerial diplomatic note to the Chinese Foreign
Ministry. The note affirmed that the activities of China's drilling
rig HD-981 and vessels seriously infringed on Vietnam's sovereignty,
sovereign right and jurisdiction over Viet Nam's Hoang Sa
archipelago, exclusive economic zone and continental shelf. They also
seriously violated agreements reached by the two countries' leaders
and went against the spirit and wording of the Declaration on the
Conduct of Parties in the East Sea (DOC) and related regulations in
international law. The note demanded that China "immediately
withdraw the drilling rig, vessels, equipment and personnel from Lot
143 in Viet Nam's continental shelf and prevent the recurrence of
similar acts."China
did not pay much heed to Vietnamese concerns, as can be seen from
subsequent developments.
Considering
the fact that Vietnam stands no comparison with China's naval might,
only thing it can do is to make enough noises by taking the matter to
international arbitration. Since Chinese move is a political one and
not commercial, the future depends on how Americans respond to the
situation.
This
week, another ASEAN Summit is likely to take place in Myanmar.
Considering this fact, it is obvious that China has posed a challenge
not just only to Vietnam but to entire ASEAN community that the
South China Sea belongs to it. Much would now also depend upon how
ASEAN members respond to this challenge since all of them, except for
Cambodia are affected by the Chinese action.
9th
May 2014
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