The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China and Southeast Asia to hold maritime drill to ease tensions

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SINGAPORE: China and Southeast Asian states will hold their first joint maritime exercises next week, officials said yesterday, in a move aimed at easing tensions but which may spark US alarm.

Beijing’s expansive claims to the South China Sea have long been a source of friction with rival claimants in Southeast Asia, as well as Washington which has traditiona­lly been the dominant naval power in the area.

Despite disagreeme­nts over Beijing’s territoria­l ambitions, China and Southeast Asia are trying to strike a more conciliato­ry tone in an effort to stop tensions from spiralling dangerousl­y out of control. As part of this, the navies of China and the 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) are set to hold their first joint drills, which will take place in the South China Sea.

“As we speak, the navies of Asean are en route to Zhanjiang in China for the Asean-China Maritime Exercise,” Singapore Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen said.

Making the announceme­nt at a gathering of Asean defence ministers in Singapore, also attended by US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis and his Chinese counterpar­t, Ng said the drills would help to ‘build trust, confidence’.

The city of Zhanjiang in southern China is home to the South Sea Fleet of the People’s Liberation

As we speak, the navies of Asean are en route to Zhanjiang in China for the Asean-China Maritime Exercise.

Ng Eng Hen, Singapore Defence Minister

Army. Tabletop exercises between Asean and China were held in Singapore in August to prepare for next week’s drills.

US officials may be alarmed that traditiona­l allies and partners in Southeast Asia appear to be drawing closer to China, at a time when concern is already growing in Asia about American commitment to the region under US President Donald Trump.

In an apparent effort to lessen any such fears, Ng also said Asean was planning to hold maritime exercises with the US for the first time next year.

Hoang Thi Ha, a political analyst with the ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, said next week’s exercises were aimed at ‘demonstrat­ing that China and Asean are managing well their maritime problems’.

But she added its significan­ce should not be overstated as it was a one-off drill in waters that were not disputed. “The US is not losing ground exactly because Asean chooses to be open and inclusive,” she told AFP.

The Southeast Asian defence ministers also agreed on guidelines to prevent unplanned encounters between their military aircraft, and will propose them to other countries, including the US and China, at a meeting today, Ng said. They are aimed at reducing the likelihood that a chance encounter could spiral into conflict in the case of a miscalcula­tion.

Four Asean members – Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Vietnam – have conflictin­g claims in the South China Sea with Beijing. China claims sovereignt­y over almost the entire area, including waters near the shores of smaller countries.

Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore and Thailand are Asean’s other members. Concerns have escalated dramatical­ly in recent years as China started building artificial islands on reefs in disputed waters, and it has also constructe­d military facilities and airstrips.

Washington has expressed alarm over the island-building, saying it could affect freedom of navigation in the sea, which hosts some of the world’s most vital commercial shipping lanes.

At yesterday’s meeting, Mattis reiterated Washington’s concern ‘about the militarisa­tion of the features in the South China Sea’. “No single nation can rewrite the internatio­nal rules of the road, and we expect all nations – large and small – to respect those rules,” he added.

The Pentagon chief met Thursday with his Chinese counterpar­t, General Wei Fenghe, on the sidelines of the gathering as they sought to normalise military relations that have dramatical­ly soured over trade and sanctions tensions.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Asean defence ministers hold signing ceremony of 12TH ADMM Joint Declaratio­n at the Asean security summit in Singapore.
— AFP photo Asean defence ministers hold signing ceremony of 12TH ADMM Joint Declaratio­n at the Asean security summit in Singapore.

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