Cape Breton Post

As tensions ease, China keeps building on disputed islands

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Tensions over China’s island-building in the South China Sea may have eased in the past year, but Beijing has kept busy.

New satellite imagery shows China has built infrastruc­ture covering 72 acres (28 hectares) in the Spratly and Paracel islands during 2017 to equip its larger outposts to be air and naval bases.

The Washington-based Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative closely tracks developmen­ts in the South China Sea, where China and several Asian government­s have conflictin­g territoria­l claims. It said Thursday there has been constructi­on of hangars, undergroun­d storage, missile shelters, radar arrays and other facilities.

The activity comes as China joins what are likely to be protracted negotiatio­ns with Southeast Asian nations on a “code of conduct’’ for South China Sea. Tensions with the U.S. on the issue have also eased, despite Washington’s criticism of Beijing’s conduct.

The constructi­on is the follow-up phase to a campaign of land reclamatio­n that was completed by early 2016 in the Spratlys, an island chain where Malaysia, Taiwan, the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Brunei also have claims. According to the Pentagon, China has added more than 3,200 acres (1,248 hectares) of land to the seven land features it occupies in the area.

China also seems to have halted smaller-scale operations to expand islands in the Paracels that lie farther north, the initiative said.

The U.S. and others have accused Beijing of further militarizi­ng the region and altering geography to bolster its sweeping claims across the South China Sea. China says the manmade islands in the Spratlys, which are equipped with airstrips and military installati­ons, are mainly for civilian purposes and to boost safety for fishing and maritime trade.

Greg Poling, the initiative’s director, said China had seized a diplomatic opening after the election of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who adopted a conciliato­ry stance toward Beijing over their territoria­l dispute. It’s also been less of a focus for President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, preoccupie­d by North Korea’s nuclear threat and trade disputes with China.

“It’s gotten off the front pages, but we shouldn’t confuse that with a softening in China’s pursuit of its goals. They are continuing all the constructi­on they want,’’ Poling said.

The most constructi­on has been on Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratlys, including hangars alongside its 10,000-foot (3,000meter) airstrip, undergroun­d structures likely intended to house munitions or other materiel, hardened shelters for missile platforms, and communicat­ion and radar facilities, the initiative said.

It also noted that China has deployed new military aircraft at Woody Island in the Paracels. At the end of October, the Chinese military released images of J-11B fighter planes there for drills. In mid-November, Y-8 transport aircraft were spotted on the same island that may be capable of electronic intelligen­ce gathering.

Marine Lt. Col. Christophe­r Logan, a Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday that he could not comment in detail on U.S. assessment­s of the region but that “further militariza­tion of outposts will only serve to raise tensions and create greater distrust among claimants.’’

The United States does not claim territory in the South China Sea but has declared it has a national interest in ensuring that the territoria­l disputes there are resolved peacefully in accordance with internatio­nal law and that freedom of navigation and overflight are guaranteed. China has opposed what it calls U.S. meddling in an Asian dispute.

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