The Star Malaysia

Treading on troubled waters

Japan conducts first submarine drill in disputed South China Sea

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Tokyo: Japan has carried out its first submarine drill in the South China Sea, a newspaper said, a move that could provoke Beijing which claims most of the disputed waters.

Submarine Kuroshio on Thursday joined three Japanese warships in waters just southwest of the China-controlled Scarboroug­h Shoal, the Asahi Shimbun said.

China claims most of the resource-rich South China Sea, through which US$5 trillion (RM20 trillion) in shipping trade passes annually, despite competing claims from Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Taiwan and Vietnam.

Tensions have been high over the Scarboroug­h Shoal since it was seized from Manila by Beijing in 2012.

The newspaper said the submarine exercises were Tokyo’s first in the South China Sea.

Japan’s Maritime Self-Defence Force carried out a “practical” anti-submarine drill, including an exercise to spot enemy submarines with sonar devices, Asahi said, quoting unnamed Japanese government sources.

The sources said it was a legitimate naval exercise in neutral waters, with rights of access secured under internatio­nal law.

Following the drill, the Japanese submarine plans to make a port call at Cam Ranh, central Vietnam, in a bid to display Tokyo’s defence cooperatio­n with Hanoi, Asahi said.

It will be the first call by a submarine at the strategica­lly important port since the Second World War, it added.

The disputed South China Sea contains vital global shipping routes and what are believed to be significan­t oil and natural gas deposits.

China has engaged in years of land-reclamatio­n efforts on reefs it controls in the region, and built both civilian and military facilities in the contested area.

Earlier this month, Beijing lashed out at Britain for sending a warship close to the disputed islands – one of a series of “freedom of navigation” operations carried out in recent times by the US and its allies as a signal to Beijing of their right to access the disputed waters.

Immediate confirmati­on of the Asahi Shimbun report was not available.

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