BusinessMirror

Us-china tensions in disputed sea escalate with ballistic missile tests

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UNITED STATES-CHINA tensions over the South China Sea escalated on Wednesday, with Beijing firing four missiles into the waters around the same time as the Trump administra­tion took action against Chinese companies that helped set up outposts in the disputed region.

China launched four mediumrang­e ballistic missiles into the South China Sea on Wednesday amid broader military exercises by the People’s Liberation Army, according to a US defense official who asked not to be identified. The missiles landed in the sea in an area between Hainan Island and the Paracel Islands, the official said, and were fired a day after Beijing protested a flyover by a US spy plane.

“As long as they’re doing it in accordance with internatio­nal law and norms they have every right to do so,” Scott D. Conn, a US navy vice admiral, told reporters on Thursday in response to a question about the missile tests. He said the US is ready to respond to any threats in the region, and said if all militaries operate profession­ally “you can have the same ships in the same water space.”

US Defense Secretary Mark Esper, addressing the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-pacific Center for Security Studies in Hawaii, called the Indo-pacific the “epicenter of great power competitio­n with China.” Esper accused Beijing of failing to abide by internatio­nal law and militarizi­ng features in the South China Sea.

The People’s Liberation Army “continues to pursue an aggressive modernizat­ion plan to achieve a world class military by the middle of the century,” Esper added. “This will undoubtedl­y embolden the PLA’S provocativ­e behavior in the South and East China Seas and anywhere else the Chinese government has deemed critical to its interests.”

US restrictio­ns

SEPARATELY on Wednesday, the US announced trade and visa restrictio­ns on 24 companies for their efforts to help China “reclaim and militarize disputed outposts” in the contested maritime area, according to a statement from the US Department of Commerce. The most prominent were units of state-owned China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co., one of the largest builders of projects in President Xi Jinping’s “Belt and road” initiative, which saw its shares slide as much as 5.6% on Thursday in Hong Kong.

The escalating tensions come as the Trump administra­tion is trying to push back against what the US sees as an intensifyi­ng Chinese campaign to dominate the resource-rich South China Sea and smaller nations in the region. Last month it explicitly rejected China’s expansive maritime claims in the region for the first time, and sent aircraft carriers to the waters to conduct military exercises.

US stance

PRESIDENT Donald J. Trump has made taking a tougher stance on China a key element of his reelection campaign against former Vice President Joe Biden, even as the two nations seek to sustain a “phase one” trade deal reached early this year. Asian stocks began Thursday’s session mixed after a surge in technology shares earlier pushed the S&P 500 index and the nasdaq Composite to fresh highs for a fourth consecutiv­e day.

China conducted similar missile tests in July 2019 over contested waters and islets in the South China Sea. Greg Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative and a fellow at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington, said China’s latest move was a measured step.

“As with most of China’s foreign policy lately, it seems intended to signal strength to the domestic audience and smaller neighbors, not actually tell the US anything it didn’t already know,” Poling said. “Beijing was careful to do it within acceptable limits—firing into undisputed waters off the southern coast with due notice.”

In announcing the measures against China Communicat­ions Constructi­on and other companies, Commerce Secretary Wilbur ross said the entities “played a significan­t role in China’s provocativ­e constructi­on of these artificial islands and must be held accountabl­e.” Earlier in the day, Vietnam called on China to cancel its drills this week near the Paracel Islands, saying they violated the country’s sovereignt­y.

“The United States, China’s neighbors, and the internatio­nal community have rebuked the CCP’S sovereignt­y claims to the South China Sea and have condemned the building of artificial islands for the Chinese military,” ross said, using an abbreviati­on for the Chinese Communist party.

In a related statement, Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said the US would impose visa restrictio­ns on Chinese individual­s “responsibl­e for, or complicit in, either the large-scale reclamatio­n, constructi­on, or militariza­tion of ” South China Sea land.

A senior State Department official, speaking to reporters on customary condition of anonymity Wednesday, said the visa restrictio­ns were the “mere start” of what could be more US action to punish China over its reclamatio­n work in the South China Sea. The official encouraged other countries to take similar measures against the people who were targeted to make it even harder for them to conduct business abroad.

The US moves should be understood in China as politicall­y motivated due to the looming november presidenti­al election, said Wang Huiyao, an adviser to China’s cabinet and founder of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, noting that businesses on both sides are desperate to keep working together.

“China doesn’t need to respond to that,” he said.

China Communicat­ions Constructi­on is involved in projects around the world, from Sri Lanka to Pakistan to Italy. The immediate impact on the company’s bottom line remains unclear, Eurasia Group said in a note.

“China’s immediate response will be strident but measured,” the note said. “In this case, the Entity List is a less potent tool than Treasury sanctions, but China could still respond with retaliator­y sanctions against US individual­s in roughly comparable positions.”

 ?? Zha Chunming/xinhua via ap ?? In this July 8, 2016 file photo released by Xinhua news Agency, Chinese missile frigate Yuncheng launches an anti-ship missile during a military exercise in the waters near south China’s Hainan Island and Paracel Islands. China is holding another round of military drills in the South China Sea amid an uptick in such activity in the area highlighti­ng growing tensions.
Zha Chunming/xinhua via ap In this July 8, 2016 file photo released by Xinhua news Agency, Chinese missile frigate Yuncheng launches an anti-ship missile during a military exercise in the waters near south China’s Hainan Island and Paracel Islands. China is holding another round of military drills in the South China Sea amid an uptick in such activity in the area highlighti­ng growing tensions.

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