US sees China boosting military presence in dispute island
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — China is expected to add substantial military infrastructure, including surveillance systems, to artificial islands in the South China Sea this year, giving it long-term “civil-military bases” in the contested waters, the Pentagon said on Friday.
In its annual report to Congress on China’s military activities in 2015, the US Defense Department estimated that China’s reclamation work had added more than 1,300 hectares of land on seven features it occupied in the Spratly Islands in only two years.
It said China had completed its major reclamation efforts in October, switching focus to infrastructure development, including three the 3,000 meter-long airstrips that can accommodate advanced fighter jets.
“Additional substantial infrastructure, including communications and surveillance systems, is expected to be built on these features in the coming year,” the report said. “China will be able to use its reclaimed features as persistent civil-military bases to enhance its presence in the South China Sea significantly.”
The report comes at a time of heightened tension over maritime territories claimed by China and disputed by several Asian nations. Washington has accused Beijing of militarizing the South China Sea while Beijing, in turn, has criticized increased US naval patrols and exercises in Asia.
The Pentagon report said China was focusing on developing capabilities to counter outside intervention in any conflict, but appeared to want to avoid direct confrontation with the US in Asia, given the potential economic damage.
At the same time, “China demonstrated a willingness to tolerate higher levels of tension in the pursuit of its interests, especially in pursuit of its territorial claims,” the report said.
The Pentagon disclosed on Friday that the US military’s top officer, Marine General Joseph Dunford, had proposed an effort to “bolster risk reduction mechanisms” to his counterpart, the Chinese Chief of the Joint Staff Department General Fang Fenghui.
Dunford’s spokesman, Captain Greg Hicks, said in a statement that both sides agreed the talks, which took place by video conference on Thursday, were a valuable way to “manage both cooperative and contentious issues, and avoid miscalculation.”