Arab Times

‘US warship trespassed’

Manila intel on ‘Sea’ targeted

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BEIJING, May 25, (Agencies): China on Thursday accused the US of trespassin­g after an American warship sailed near a reef claimed by Beijing in the South China Sea, the first such operation by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion in the disputed waterway.

The row comes during a period of warming relations between the countries with Trump saying that Washington has dialed down pressure on Beijing over other issues in hopes of securing their cooperatio­n on North Korea.

The guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey entered the area “without permission from the Chinese government”, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters at a regular press briefing, adding that the ship had “trespassed in the waters near the relevant islands and reefs”.

“The relevant action taken by the US vessel undermines China’s sovereignt­y and security interests, and is very likely to cause unexpected sea and air accidents,” he said, urging Washington to stop “provocativ­e actions”.

The USS Dewey sailed less than 12 nautical miles from Mischief Reef — part of the Spratly Islands — on Thursday morning local time, a US official said earlier, the first freedom of navigation operation under Trump. The UN says nations can establish the breadth of their territoria­l sea up to a limit of 12 nautical miles.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, despite partial counter-claims from Taiwan and several southeast Asian nations including the Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam.

It has rapidly built reefs into artificial islands capable of hosting military planes.

The US has challenged annexation­s of these islets and advocated for a diplomatic settlement to the disputes.

Speaking earlier in the day, Pentagon spokesman, Major Jamie Davis, said US forces operate in the South China Sea on a daily basis and will fly and sail “wherever internatio­nal law” allows.

“We have a comprehens­ive Freedom of Navigation Operations program that seeks to challenge excessive maritime claims in order to preserve the rights, freedoms, and uses of the sea and airspace guaranteed to all nations under internatio­nal law,” Davis said in a statement to AFP.

The exercises are “not about any one country, nor are they about making political statements,” he added.

The US operation came a week after the Pentagon said that Chinese jets conducted an “unprofessi­onal” intercept of a US radiation sniffing plane.

China denied the accusation, with the Ministry of Defense saying Thursday that “the close reconnaiss­ance activities conducted by US military ships and planes towards China are the root cause of the security issues between China and the US over the sea and in the air.”

Also:

MANILA:

Hackers linked with the Vietnamese government are likely targeting Philippine government agencies to gather intelligen­ce related to the maritime dispute in the South China Sea, cybersecur­ity company FireEye said on Thursday.

That same group, which FireEye called APT32, was also responsibl­e for attacking a Philippine consumer products corporatio­n and a Philippine technology infrastruc­ture firm in 2016, the company said in a media briefing.

Bryce Boland, chief technology officer for Asia Pacific, said the company had observed that APT32 was targeting not just multinatio­nal companies and organisati­ons doing business in Vietnam but Philippine government agencies as well.

“This is presumably in order to gain access to informatio­n about military preparatio­n and understand­ing how the organisati­ons within the government operate in order to be better prepared in case of potentiall­y military conflict,” Boland said.

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