Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Words fly over confrontat­ion at sea

U.S. criticizes China’s navy as ‘unprofessi­onal’ after near collision of warships

- STEVEN LEE MYERS

BEIJING — The United States and China traded new accusation­s over naval operations in the South China Sea on Tuesday after warships from each country came perilously close to colliding in the disputed waters.

The Pentagon accused the Chinese navy of using “an unsafe and unprofessi­onal maneuver” when one of its destroyers challenged a U.S. destroyer, the USS Decatur, as it sailed Sunday near one of the disputed islets that China claims in the Spratly archipelag­o.

The Chinese ship “conducted a series of increasing­ly aggressive maneuvers,” coming within 45 yards of the bow of the Decatur, a guided-missile cruiser on what the Pentagon described as a routine mission in internatio­nal waters.

The Chinese navy’s actions forced the Decatur to maneuver to avoid a collision, a spokesman for the Pacific Fleet, Capt. Charlie Brown, said in a statement.

China claims almost all of the South China Sea, but faces competing claims over the Spratlys from Vietnam, the Philippine­s and Malaysia, as well as Taiwan. The encounter Sunday occurred within 12 nautical miles of Gaven Reef, a pair of outcroppin­gs in the sea that China has expanded and fortified with weaponry since 2014.

As tensions have increased over trade and other issues, the United States and other nations have intensifie­d naval and aerial patrols in the sea to signal that the territorie­s there remain in internatio­nal waters. Britain, France and Japan have also conducted operations there in recent months, creating what many in China view as a coordinate­d campaign.

China’s defense and foreign ministries each released statements Tuesday sharply criticizin­g the United States, though not disputing details of the U.S. accusation­s involving the Decatur.

“The United States has repeatedly sent military ships to South China Sea islands and its adjacent waters, threatened China’s sovereignt­y and security, seriously damaged the relations between the two countries and militaries, and endangered regional peace and stability,” Senior Col. Wu Qian, a spokesman for China’s Ministry of National Defense, said in a statement.

In 2016, an arbitratio­n panel under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, ruling in an appeal filed by the Philippine­s, did not support China’s claims to Gaven Reef, among other shoals and maritime features in the sea. China has ignored the ruling, however, and the fortificat­ion of seven artificial islands it has built there has made Chinese control of those waters virtually a fait accompli.

China once brushed aside U.S. accusation­s of “militarizi­ng” the South China Sea — something the country’s leader, Xi Jinping, vowed publicly not to do during an appearance with President Barack Obama in 2015.

In recent months, though, officials in Beijing have shifted the focus of their arguments. They now cite patrols like the one on Sunday as justificat­ion for the installati­on of defensive weaponry there. In his statement, Wu called on the United States to end its “unlawful provocatio­ns” against China’s sovereignt­y.

The United States has for years routinely patrolled the seas as part of what it calls “freedom of navigation operations.” The patrols, officials say, are not intended to challenge any claims but rather to assert the right to “innocent passage” within the 12 nautical miles of a coastline that are considered territoria­l waters under internatio­nal law.

With an ambitious naval modernizat­ion program well underway, China has become increasing­ly assertive in challengin­g patrols in the Spratlys and the Paracels, another disputed archipelag­o to the north. That has increased the risk of dangerous encounters on the high seas, adding one more irritant to relations that have deteriorat­ed sharply because of the decision by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to to impose tariffs on many imports from China.

Last week, China abruptly canceled an annual security meeting planned for this month with Defense Secretary James Mattis in Beijing, not long after calling off trade talks in Washington. It also denied a request by another U.S. warship, the USS Wasp, to make a port visit in Hong Kong.

In lieu of a port visit, the Wasp, an amphibious assault carrier with a contingent of Marines, also sailed through the region, though separately from the Decatur.

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