Stabroek News

China finishing South China Sea buildings that could house missiles -U.S. officials

-

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - China, in an early test of U.S. President Donald Trump, is nearly finished building almost two dozen structures on artificial islands in the South China Sea that appear designed to house long-range surface-toair missiles, two U.S. officials told Reuters. The developmen­t is likely to raise questions about whether and how the United States will respond, given its vows to take a tough line on China in the South China Sea.

China claims almost all the South China Sea, which carries a third of the world’s maritime traffic. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims. Trump’s administra­tion has called China’s island building in the South China Sea illegal. Building the concrete structures with retractabl­e roofs on Subi, Mischief and Fiery Cross reefs, part of the Spratly Islands chain where China already has built military-length airstrips, could be considered a military escalation, the U.S. officials said in recent days, speaking on condition of anonymity. “It is not like the Chinese to build anything in the South China Sea just to build it, and these structures resemble others that house SAM batteries, so the logical conclusion is that’s what they are for,” said a U.S. intelligen­ce official.

Another official said the structures appeared to be 20 meters (66 feet) long and 10 meters (33 feet) high.

A Pentagon spokesman said the United States remained committed to “non-militariza­tion in the South China Sea” and urged all claimants to take actions consistent with internatio­nal law. The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In his Senate confirmati­on hearing last month, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson raised China’s ire when he said Beijing should be denied access to the islands it is building in the South China Sea. Tillerson subsequent­ly softened his language, and Trump further reduced tensions by pledging to honor the long-standing U.S. “One China” policy in a Feb. 10 telephone call with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Greg Poling, a South China Sea expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington, said in a December report that China apparently had installed weapons, including antiaircra­ft and anti-missile systems, on all seven of the islands it has built in the South China Sea.

The officials said the new structures were likely to house surface-to-air missiles that would expand China’s air defense umbrella over the islands. They did not give a time line on when they believed China would deploy missiles on the islands. “It certainly raises the tension,” Poling said. “The Chinese have gotten good at these steady increases in their capabiliti­es.”

On Tuesday, the Philippine­s said Southeast Asian countries saw China’s installati­on of weapons in the South China Sea as “very unsettling” and have urged dialogue to stop an escalation of “recent developmen­ts.” Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay did not say what provoked the concern but said the 10member Associatio­n of South East Asian Nations, or ASEAN, hoped China and the United States would ensure peace and stability. The U.S. intelligen­ce official said the structures did not pose a significan­t military threat to U.S. forces in the region, given their visibility and vulnerabil­ity.

Building them appeared to be more of a political test of how the Trump administra­tion would respond, he said.

“The logical response would also be political – something that should not lead to military escalation in a vital strategic area,” the official said. Chas Freeman, a China expert and former assistant secretary of defense, said he was inclined to view such installati­ons as serving a military purpose - bolstering China’s claims against those of other nations - rather than a political signal to the United States.

“There is a tendency here in Washington to imagine that it’s all about us, but we are not a claimant in the South China Sea,” Freeman said. “We are not going to challenge China’s possession of any of these land features in my judgment. If that’s going to happen, it’s going to be done by the Vietnamese, or . . . the Filipinos . . . or the Malaysians, who are the three counter-claimants of note.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana