The Freeman

Beijing’s bombers fly over S. China Sea amid protests

-

BEIJING —China's brazen landing of nuclear-capable bombers on an island in the disputed South China Sea is a bold power play to bolster its territoria­l claims, while rivals are divided and the US distracted by North Korea, analysts say.

China attracted diplomatic protests after long-range H-6K bombers carried out landing and takeoff drills at an unidentifi­ed island airstrip on Friday.

But Beijing has long brushed aside such condemnati­on, denying that it was militarizi­ng the region even though it has installed an array of airstrips, radar systems and naval facilities on a string of islands it has reclaimed in contested areas since 2013.

The planes are believed to have landed on Woody Island, China's largest base in the Paracel Islands which is also claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan, according to Bonnie Glaser, a China expert at the Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington.

An H-6K long-range strategic bomber deployed to Woody Island could reach almost the entire South China Sea and many countries surroundin­g it, according to a CSIS analysis.

The steady buildup of military assets in the waterway – believed to have significan­t oil and natural gas deposits – allows China to "influence its weaker neighbors in peacetime," Glaser said.

"Through the use of a large number of law enforcemen­t ships, for example, it can pressure Vietnam and the Philippine­s not to unilateral­ly extract energy in waters that China claims jurisdicti­onal rights," she said."In wartime, China's military assets on these islands will increase the risk to the US of intervenin­g militarily."

Earlier this month China deployed anti-ship cruise missiles and surface-to-air missiles on the disputed Spratly Islands off the Philippine coast, CNBC reported, citing sources close to US intelligen­ce.

Beijing claims virtually all the South China Sea and has ignored partial counter-claims from the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Taiwan, Brunei and Malaysia.

The Pentagon condemned Friday's bomber drills as a sign of "continued militariza­tion" of disputed islands while Vietnam said the move violated its sovereignt­y and raised tensions in the region.

The Philippine­s, which has largely backed off from the sea dispute under China-friendly President Rodrigo Duterte, said it was taking "appropriat­e diplomatic action."

Despite the rhetoric, experts say little has been done to prevent China from solidifyin­g its vast maritime claims.Beijing has managed to weaken regional resistance by courting some members of the 10-nation Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

China's foreign ministry has repeated denials that the region was being militarize­d, saying the islands belong to Beijing and the bombers were conducting "normal training."

The latest exercises were "largely symbolic" and not a significan­t military developmen­t, Graham said.To deploy from Woody Island, China would have to install logistics infrastruc­ture to operate aircraft, refuel them, store weapons and house crews, he said."Just landing an aircraft doesn't make it an operationa­l space."

It would be more significan­t if and when China starts flying combat aircraft to the Spratlys, he said, because that would bring northern Australia into missile range.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines