San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. CALLS CHINA’S ACTIONS UNLAWFUL

Tensions mount over Beijing’s claims in South China Sea

- BY EDWARD WONG & MICHAEL CROWLEY Wong and Crowley write for The New York Times.

WASHINGTON

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Monday that China’s expansive maritime claims across most of the South China Sea were “completely unlawful,” setting up potential military confrontat­ions with Beijing and sanctions against companies as the United States seeks to push back Chinese activity in the region.

Pompeo said China’s yearslong “campaign of bullying to control” offshore resources across much of the area was illegal. The announceme­nt was the strongest and most explicit support by Washington of a ruling in 2016 by an internatio­nal tribunal at The Hague that China had violated internatio­nal law with its actions.

Pompeo’s announceme­nt aligns U.S. policy directly with that ruling and puts Washington in a position to enforce the tribunal’s decision, even though China has rejected it. The statement is not explicit on U.S. military aid, but leaves open the possibilit­y that the United States might come to the defense of nations like Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippine­s if clashes erupt because of Chinese aggression. The United States has a mutual defense treaty with the Philippine­s.

“The statement is a fullthroat­ed endorsemen­t of the tribunal’s ruling,” said M. Taylor Fravel, a political scientist at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology who studies China’s territoria­l disputes and its military.

But the United States is sticking to its policy of neutrality on competing claims to legitimate land features such as the Spratly Islands, he added.

China and five other government­s have competing claims to land features in the South China Sea, and China has also come into conflict with Indonesia over Chinese activity in waters by that large archipelag­o nation. China delineates its claims to the South China Sea with what it calls “a nine-dashed line,” a boundary that encompasse­s an area the size of Mexico and demarcates almost the entire region.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington said in a statement that the U.S. government “exaggerate­s the situation in the region and attempts to sow discord between China and other littoral countries.”

“The accusation is completely unjustifie­d,” it added. “The Chinese side is firmly opposed to it.”

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