Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Beijing protests US Navy patrol through South China Sea

- By Christophe­r Bodeen

BEIJING >> China protested a U.S. Navy patrol that sent a guided missile destroyer near a group of man-made islands in the South China Sea on Thursday, in the first American challenge to Beijing’s claims to the waters since President Donald Trump took office.

China’s Defense Ministry told reporters that it had sought an explanatio­n with U.S. officials over the incident, which Beijing said involved the USS Dewey and took place around Mischief Reef, one of a chain of artificial islands China has built and fortified to assert its claims over the strategic waterway.

While U.S. officials did not immediatel­y comment on Thursday’s operation, Washington has in the past insisted that it has the right to conduct so-called freedom of navigation operations, or FONOPS, in the area because it is in internatio­nal waters. The Navy conducted similar operations under former President Barack Obama, but had not done so since Trump took office and began talking up the prospect of warming ties with Beijing and cooperatin­g over issues like North Korea.

A spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry said the U.S. destroyer had “trespassed” near islands over which China has “indisputab­le sovereignt­y.”

“We urge the U.S. to correct this mistake and stop taking further actions so as to avoid hurting peace and security in the region and long-term cooperatio­n between the two countries,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said.

Defense Ministry spokesman Col. Ren Guoqiang told reporters at a monthly news briefing that a pair of Chinese navy frigates had warned off the American ship after it entered the area without China’s permission.

“We urge the American side to take concrete efforts to correct its wrongdoing­s and add more positive energy to the military-to-military relationsh­ip,” Ren said.

The spokesman added that the U.S. actions not only posed the risk of sparking an accident at sea but would “only motivate the Chinese military to enhance its capacity.”

China claims virtually the entire South China Sea and has aggressive­ly tried to fortify its foothold in recent years by transformi­ng seven mostly submerged reefs into island outposts, some with runways and radars and — more recently — weapons systems.

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