Kuwait Times

South China Sea’s buildup continues amid distractio­ns

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WASHINGTON: While attention in Asia has been distracted by the North Korean nuclear crisis in the past year, China has continued to install high-frequency radar and other facilities that can be used for military purposes on its man-made islands in the South China Sea, a US think tank said on Thursday. Chinese activity has involved work on facilities covering 72 acres of the Spratly and Paracel islands, territory contested with several other Asian nations, according to the Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative of Washington’s Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. The report cited satellite images.

The United States and its allies oppose China’s building of artificial islands in the South China Sea and their militariza­tion, given concerns Beijing plans to use them to deny access to strategic routes. “It’s completely normal for China to conduct peaceful constructi­on and build essential defense equipment on its own sovereign territory,” China’s foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang told a regular press briefing on Friday, in response to a question about the report.

“We believe certain people who have ulterior motives are making mountains out of molehills and stirring up trouble.” The report said that in the last several months China had constructe­d what appeared to be a new high-frequency radar array at the northern end of Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratlys. Subi Reef had seen tunnels completed that were likely for ammunition storage and another radar antenna array and radar domes, the report said. Constructi­on on Mischief Reef included undergroun­d storage for ammunition and hangars, missile shelters and radar arrays. Smaller-scale work had continued in the Paracel Islands, including a new helipad and wind turbines on Tree Island and two large radar towers on Triton Island. It said the latter were especially important as waters around Triton had been the scene of recent incidents between China and Vietnam and multiple U.S. freedom-of-navigation operations, which the US navy has used to assert what it sees as its right to free passage in internatio­nal waters. Woody Island, China’s military and administra­tive headquarte­rs in the South China Sea, saw two first-time air deployment­s “that hint at things to come at the three Spratly Island air bases farther south,” the report said.

 ?? _—AFP ?? NANJING: People’s Liberation Army (PLA) soldiers participat­e in a ceremony at the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall in Nanjing.
_—AFP NANJING: People’s Liberation Army (PLA) soldiers participat­e in a ceremony at the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall in Nanjing.

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