Building artificial islands – China’s plot of changing status quo to bolster its claim in South China Sea (Part I)
12/9/14
China’s island
factory
On May 2nd 2014,
tensions dangerously escalated in the South China Sea (SCS) after China’s HYSY 981 oil rig began its drilling
operation in an area within Vietnam’s
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and continental shelf. While the HYSY 981 event
has become the focal point of SCS developments at the moment, there are signs
of another alarming threat to this region’s peace and stability.
News from various
sources shows that China is
quietly attempting to build an artificial island upon the Johnson South Reef in
the Spratly Islands. Furthermore, Beijing is also planning similar activities
in several other reefs of this archipelago. This is a dangerous intrigue and
might give China
significant advantages in SCS disputes.
In the BBC report,
entitled “China’s Island Factory,” reporter Rupert Wingfield-Hayes
describes his journey on a Filipino fishing boat to visit “new islands” created
by Chinese land reclamation in the South China Sea.
China has been moving sand onto reefs and shoals to add
several new islands to the Spratly archipelago, in what foreign officials say
is a new effort to expand the Chinese footprint in the South
China Sea. The officials say the islands will be able to support
large buildings, human habitation and surveillance equipment, including radar.
The appearance of these new islands has
happened suddenly and is a dramatic new move in a longstanding territorial
struggle in the South China Sea.
At
the beginning of this year, the Chinese presence in the Spratly Islands
consisted of a handful of outposts, a collection of concrete blockhouses
perched atop coral atolls. Since January, China has been building three or
four islands, projected to be 20 to 40 acres each, one Western official said.
He added that there appeared to be at least one installation intended for
military use, and that the new islands could be used for resupplying ships,
including Chinese maritime patrol vessels.
Now it is building substantial new islands on
five different reefs. On one of these new islands, China seems to be preparing to
build an air base with a concrete runway long enough for fighter jets to take
off and land.
It is argued that
the project will provide supplies to ships and oil rigs, but also further
deepen mistrust among China’s
neighbors and cause instability in the region. Moreover, the Chinese
construction appeared to be designed to support an airstrip and a port,
increasing concerns that the project may be an attempt by China to better project its military strength in
the South China Sea.
Beijing’s intrigue to construct artificial islands in the Spratly Islands is a major step in its plan to
boost its military power there. Since 1988, China has illegally occupied
at least 9 reefs in this archipelago. For the purpose of military stationing or
for other purposes, China
has been gradually constructing and expanding artificial structures
on those reefs.
All comments [ 10 ]
China has been dredging millions of tons of rock and sand and piling it on top of submerged reefs in the South China Sea. That's so aggressive!
China can create “islands” on top of previously submerged features and create conditions for these new islands to “sustain human habitation,” then China would have strongly bolstered its claims to the South China Sea.
They want to be an islands producer, so crazy!
On Johnson South Reef, China seems to be preparing to build an air base with a concrete runway long enough for fighter jets to take off and land.
They built the islands so that it can lay claim to the exclusive economic zone that surrounds them for 200 nautical miles, as defined by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Seas.
The Chinese construction appeared to be designed to support an airstrip and a port, in an attempt by China to better project its military strength in the South China Sea.
This would mean China could control much of the South China Sea, a vital waterway for region.
Beijing’s intrigue to construct artificial islands in the Spratly Islands is a major step in its plan to boost its military power there.
Some analysts say the Chinese military is eyeing a perch in the Spratlys as part of a long-term strategy of power projection across the Western Pacific.
Vietnam demanded that China immediately stop illegal activities of expansion and construction on the reef and withdraw its vessels and facilities from the area.
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