Houston Chronicle

‘Game of chicken’ as U.S. and China risk a clash at sea

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HONOLULU — From a distance, the Chinese warship warned the U.S. destroyer that it was on a “dangerous course” in the South China Sea. Then it raced up alongside. For a few tense minutes, a collision seemed imminent.

The U.S. vessel, the Decatur, blasted its whistle. The Chinese took no notice.

Only a sharp starboard turn by the Decatur avoided a disaster that early morning in September — one that could have badly damaged both vessels, killed members of both crews and thrust two nuclear powers into an internatio­nal crisis, according to a senior American official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the encounter in detail.

The ships came within 45 yards of each other, marking the closest call yet as the U.S. Navy contests China’s military buildup in the South China Sea. The Sept. 30 encounter signaled what U.S. commanders fear is a perilous new phase in confrontat­ions in the disputed waterway, which are unfolding without even a Cold War-style agreement on basic rules of conduct aimed at preventing escalation.

“A game of chicken is being played around Asia’s flash points,” said Brendan Taylor, an expert on the South China Sea at the Australian National University.

China’s defense minister, Wei Fenghe, and Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis are expected to make an effort to calm those rising tensions and reduce the risks of miscalcula­tion when they meet in Washington on Friday.

But the trade war and Vice President Mike Pence’s speech last month declaring that the U.S. would take a far tougher line on China give the two men little incentive to ease tensions in the waterway.

Neither side appears ready to back down.

The United States and China “will meet each other more and more on the high seas,” the chief of naval operations, Adm. John M. Richardson, warned after September’s near miss.

 ?? Petty Officer 2nd Class Diana Quinlan via New York Times ?? The Decatur, a U.S. Navy destroyer, almost collided with a Chinese warship in the volatile South China Sea in September, and tensions remain high.
Petty Officer 2nd Class Diana Quinlan via New York Times The Decatur, a U.S. Navy destroyer, almost collided with a Chinese warship in the volatile South China Sea in September, and tensions remain high.

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