China said on Thursday it is entitled to keep watch over airspace and seas surrounding artificial islands it created in the disputed waters of the South China Sea, following an exchange in which its navy warned off a US surveillance plane.
Malacañang, meanwhile, said it is verifying the full details of the latest Kagitingan (Fiery Cross) Reef incident reported by CNN, where Chinese military repeatedly warned a US Navy Orion aircraft to “go away”.
Communications Secretary Herminio B. Coloma Jr. on Friday said the Philippine government stands fast on its diplomatic track to pursue its case against China under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Coloma added that the Aquino administration is also prodding the Asean to adopt a legally binding Code of Conduct covering all claimants in disputed territories.
In a news briefing, the Palace official acknowledged that the CNN report indicates the stark reality of heightening tension caused by illegal Chinese reclamations and Beijing’s nine-dash line, claiming almost the entire South China Sea.
He expects that discussions in Tokyo last year—where all Asean members rejected Chinese notion of imposing “Air Defense Identification Zone” in both East and South China Sea—would soon be revived.
Coloma asserted it is not just freedom of navigation, but also “freedom of aviation,” that impacts global commerce.
As far as he knows, the secretary said there is a continuing study by government lawyers on the legal aspects of the Philippine petition before the UN Arbitral Tribunal.
The US said its aerial patrolling was in accordance with international law and “no one in their right mind” would try to stop it.
Neither side says it wants confrontation with the other, but as China seeks to assert its expansive claims to the South China Sea, the US is pushing back and trying to demonstrate that China’s massive land reclamation does not give its territorial rights.
A news crew member from CNN reported it witnessed an incident on Wednesday, in which a Chinese navy dispatcher demanded eight times that a US Navy P8-A Poseidon surveillance aircraft leave the area as it flew over Fiery Cross Reef, where China has conducted extensive reclamation work. It said the US crew member responded that they were flying through international airspace, to which the Chinese dispatcher answered: “This is the Chinese navy…You go!”
The Center for Strategic and In-ternational Studies think tank posted more video on Thursday of the aerial patrol above the Spratly Island chain, which, it said, had been released by the US Navy.
Speaking at a regular daily briefing, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hong Lei reiterated Beijing’s insistence on its indisputable sovereignty over the islands it has created by piling sand on top of atolls and reefs.
While saying he had no information about the reported exchange, Hong said China was “entitled to the surveillance over related airspace and sea areas so as to maintain national security and avoid any maritime accidents. “We hope relevant countries respect China’s sovereignty over the South China Sea, abandon actions that may intensify controversies and play a constructive role for regional peace and stability,” Hong told reporters.
In Washington, Daniel Russel, the top US diplomat for East Asia, said the flight of a US reconnaissance plane in international airspace over the South China Sea was a regular and appropriate occurrence. He said the US will seek to preserve the ability of not just the US but all countries to exercise their rights to freedom of navigation and overflight.
“Nobody in their right mind is going to try to stop the US Navy from operating. That would not be a good step. But it’s not enough that a US
military plane can overfly international waters, even if there is a challenge or a hail and query” from the Chinese military, he said.
“We believe that every country and all civilian actors also should have unfettered access to international waters and international airspace,” he said.
China’s construction has intensified frictions among competing parties in the South China Sea, which Beijing claims virtually in its entirety along with its scattered island
groups. The area that is home to some of the world’s busiest commercial shipping routes is also claimed
in part or in whole by the Philippines, Taiwan, Brunei Darussalam, Malaysia and Vietnam.
The US and most of the 10 Asean members want a halt to the projects, which they suspect are aimed at building islands and other land features over which China can claim sovereignty and base military assets.
The US says it takes no position on the sovereignty claims, but insists they must be negotiated. Washington also says ensuring maritime safety and access is a US national security priority. China is also at odds with Japan over ownership of a group of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea that are controlled by Tokyo, but also claimed by Beijing, leading to increased activity by Chinese planes and ships in the area, which lies between Taiwan and Okinawa.
Both sides have accused the other of operating dangerously, prompting fears of an incident such as the 2001 collision between a Chinese fighter jet and a US surveillance plane, in which the Chinese pilot was killed and the American crew member detained on China’s Hainan island.
Also on Thursday, the Chinese air force announced its latest offshore training exercises in the western Pacific as part of efforts to boost its combat preparedness.
People’s Liberation Army Air Force Spokesman Shen Jinke said the exercises were held in international airspace but gave no specifics. In its report on the drills, state broadcaster close-circuit television showed a video of Xian H-6 twin-engine bombers, a Chinese version of Russia’s Tupelov Tu-16, in flight and landing at an air base, although it wasn’t clear when the video was shot.