Arab Times

Sea ruling has so far fueled tensions

Mesh of overlappin­g claims

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By Jim Gomez, Christophe­r Bodeen Ken Moritsugu t’s a ruling that China cannot accept, and one that the Philippine­s must.

An internatio­nal arbitratio­n panel’s decision on the contested waters of the South China Sea so far is fueling regional tensions rather than tamping them down.

In the ensuing 11 days, China has responded to the sweeping victory for the Philippine­s by flexing its military might. The Philippine­s faces pressure both at home and abroad not to cede an inch to China after the July 12 decision by a tribunal at The Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n.

The South China Sea is dotted with reefs and rocky outcroppin­gs that several government­s claim, including China and the Philippine­s. The arbitratio­n panel didn’t take a position on who owns the disputed territorie­s. It did conclude that many of them are legally rocks, even if they’ve been built into islands, and therefore do not include the rights to develop the surroundin­g waters. That and other findings invalidate­d much of what China’s called its historic claims to the resource-rich sea.

In order to ease tensions, China, the Philippine­s and possibly other claimants must define what the ruling means for fishing, offshore oil and gas exploratio­n, and military and other activities in the vast body of water that lies between the southern Chinese coast and the Philippine archipelag­o.

A major diplomatic test began Sunday in Laos at a three-day meeting of Southeast Asian foreign ministers that will include sessions with their Chinese and US counterpar­ts. Past ASEAN meetings have broken down over disagreeme­nts between those taking China’s side and those opposing it. The US, whose Navy patrols the waters, has called on China to abide by the ruling while also urging calm.

Longer-term, there are compelling reasons for China and the Philippine­s to talk, but also significan­t obstacles to that happening. Unless the two sides can find a way around their impasse, the ruling may simply prolong the South China Sea’s long-running territoria­l disputes, which also involve Vietnam,

IXi

Tsai Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei in a mesh of overlappin­g claims.

China In recent days, the military has staged live-firing exercises in the area and stated it would begin regular aerial patrols over the sea. It also has asserted that it will not be deterred from continuing constructi­on of its man-made islands in the South China Sea.

In a veiled threat, a senior government official said that China has a right to declare an air defense identifica­tion zone over the area if its security is threatened. Under a so-called ADIZ, countries require that aircraft in the zone identify themselves and their routes and follow Chinese instructio­ns. At least the US and Japan would almost certainly refuse to comply, creating new opportunit­ies for confrontat­ion.

While Beijing’s initial fury was widely foreseen, the controvers­y essentiall­y disappeare­d from Chinese state media on Friday, a possible indication that China is preparing to tone it down.

The approach threatened to tarnish China’s global prestige by making it appear unwilling to play by the rules of internatio­nal law. In particular, China’s relations with the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations could suffer, further reducing its hopes of regaining its status as Asia’s dominant political and economic power.

Under such circumstan­ces, Beijing might at least try to give the appearance of engagement on the issue. China is hosting the G20 meeting of major economies in September and doesn’t want the summit to turn into a “China-bashing fest,” said Yanmei Xie of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank. However, it’s far from clear whether its neighbors will see any outreach from China as sincere. The Philippine­s already has turned down an offer for bilateral talks, saying China first must recognize the panel’s ruling.

Philippine­s The Philippine­s new president, Rodrigo Duterte, is on a tightrope.

The arbitratio­n ruling was a huge legal victory, but also presents a dilemma to Duterte, who has made friendly overtures to Beijing.

On one side, he aspires to repair strained relations with the Asian economic powerhouse, which has offered to finance railway projects he had sought. On the other, any move that can be seen as a compromise on the ruling can provide ammunition to his political opponents. The Philippine­s wants the Chinese coast guard to stop harassing Filipino fishermen near reefs claimed by China, as well as to allow it to explore for desperatel­y needed offshore oil and gas.

“The new government here in Manila is grappling with what might be called catastroph­ic success,” former Australian National Security Adviser Andrew Shearer said last week. “What comes next is obviously going to be a delicate balancing act.”

Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay Jr. has revealed that, during talks on the sidelines of a recent Asia-Europe meeting in Mongolia, his Chinese counterpar­t Wang Yi asked Manila to be open to bilateral negotiatio­ns “outside of and in disregard of the arbitral ruling.”

“This is something that I told him was not consistent with our constituti­on and our national interest,” Yasay said. Wang warned that if the Philippine­s insists on Chinese compliance with the ruling, “then we might be headed for a confrontat­ion,” he said.

The meeting of ASEAN foreign ministers in Laos may signal whether the Philippine­s will stick with a low-key and non-confrontat­ional approach despite its rejection of China’s condition for talks.

What’s next Had the decision been handed down during the time of Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino III, the government had planned to build pressure on China to comply by raising the issue in all internatio­nal arenas, including the UN General Assembly, according to Filipino diplomats at the time.

The new president’s non-confrontat­ional approach carries risks, if China doesn’t reciprocat­e.

“Duterte is staking his own political capital and engaging in a very risky diplomatic gambit by trying to extend the olive branch to China,” said Richard Heydarian, a Manila-based expert on the South China Sea issue. (AP)

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