The Philippine Star

US defense chief visits carrier in disputed sea

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ABOARD THE USS THEODORE ROOSEVELT – In a symbolic swipe at China’s muscular moves in the South China Sea, US Defense Secretary Ash Carter visited an American aircraft carrier in the disputed waterway.

Carter, who was in Malaysia for two days of talks with Asian defense ministers, used the visit to the USS

Theodore Roosevelt to amplify the US view that China is making excessive claims that nearly all of the South China Sea is its territory.

Carter also signaled that the US will keep a strong naval presence in the region in support of nations seeking to preserve stability. He flew aboard the carrier in a V-22 Osprey from a base in the east Malaysian state of Sabah, which is situated on the northern portion of Borneo.

In announcing his visit Wednesday, Carter called it a “symbol of our commitment” to focusing more on US interests in the Asia-Pacific following more than a decade of wars in the Middle East.

Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammudd­in Hussein accompanie­d Carter to the carrier, highlighti­ng US efforts to strengthen defense partnershi­ps in the Asia- Pacific. Malaysia is among several countries that claim a portion of the South China Sea and disagree with China’s building of artificial islands.

The Pentagon also is interested in making arrangemen­ts with Malaysia for more regular access to the naval base at Sabah for US aircraft carriers.

It is not unusual for a defense secretary to visit an aircraft carrier. But Carter’s visit drew extra attention because of the ship’s location and the tensions surroundin­g China’s reclamatio­n work, which Adm. Harry Harris, head of US forces in the Pacific, has likened to building a “great wall of sand” with the potential for confrontat­ions to escalate into armed conflict.

Carter and Hishammudd­in were expected to observe the carrier’s fighter jet operations and be briefed by Navy officers on their current and recent maneuvers.

The “TR,“as the carrier is commonly called in the Navy, is the flagship of a strike group of ships that includes a cruiser, the USS Normandy, as well as three destroyers:

the USS Winston S. Churchill, the USS Farragut and the USS Forrest Sherman.

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