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US tells Beijing sea patrols will continue: official
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 26, 2016


China-Philippines should 'turn page' on sea row: Kerry
Vientiane (AFP) July 26, 2016 - The Philippines and China should "turn the page" and hold talks over contested areas of the South China Sea after a tribunal shot down Beijing's claims to the strategic waterway, US Secretary of State John Kerry said Tuesday.

Relations between China and the Philippines hit a nadir earlier this month after Beijing refused to recognise a UN-backed ruling invalidating its claims to much of the sea.

The Philippines, which says it owns areas claimed by China, took the case to a Hague-based tribunal for arbitration.

Kerry reiterated Washington's stance that the tribunal's decision to favour the Philippines was binding, but added that it was time to seek new ground.

"I would encourage President Duterte to engage in dialogue, in negotiations," Kerry told reporters in Laos, referring to the tough-talking new Philippines leader.

Kerry is due to fly to Manila for talks with Duterte later Tuesday.

Kerry's call for fresh talks between Manila and Beijing comes at the request of his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi.

"The foreign minister said very clearly the time has come to move away from public tensions and turn the page," Kerry told reporters.

"And we agree with that... no claimant should be acting in a way that is provocative, no claimant should take steps that wind up raising tensions."

The two envoys met on the sidelines of a regional security forum of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) that has been dogged by the issue of the South China Sea.

The Philippines had been expected to push for the bloc to support the tribunal ruling in a punchy joint-statement.

But the bloc shied away from a diplomatic confrontation with China.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay told reporters that he supported that approach, describing the tribunal case as a dispute just between Beijing and Manila.

"The other countries are not part of our filing of the case before the arbitral tribunal so why would we insist that it be put in the ASEAN statement," Yasay said.

ASEAN member states span communist autocracies such as Laos and Vietnam, the tiny Islamic sultanate of Brunei and populous democracies like Indonesia and the Philippines.

It works on the basis of consensus diplomacy.

But critics have slammed the grouping for failing to present a strong front against China's aggressive divide and rule policy among its neighbours.

The US will continue naval patrols in the disputed South China Sea, Washington's National Security Adviser Susan Rice told Chinese representatives during a series of meetings in Beijing, a senior American official said Tuesday.

Rice is among the highest-level US officials to visit China since an international tribunal this month rejected its vast territorial claims in the strategically vital region -- infuriating Beijing and fuelling tensions with Washington.

Her trip was intended to prepare for a visit by President Barack Obama to a G20 summit in Hangzhou in September.

But the question of how to deal with the festering issue, in which Washington has played a prominent role, cast a long shadow over the talks, which included a meeting with President Xi Jinping.

In recent months Washington has sent naval vessels close to reefs and outcrops claimed by Beijing to assert the principle of freedom of navigation, sparking anger in China which has built a series of artificial islands in the area capable of supporting military operations.

In her meetings with top diplomatic and military officials, Rice told her counterparts that "those operations are lawful. They will continue", according to a senior US official, who asked for anonymity to discuss the sensitive subject.

The issue was not directly raised with Xi, he said, describing the conversation as "incredibly positive", although "there was a very clear recognition that we face a number of challenges".

In general terms, he said, "both sides were very clear with one another".

"There's no room for ambiguity," he added. "That kind of clarity... promotes stability and reduces the risk of miscalculation."

- 'Risk of miscalculation' -

A tribunal at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague on July 12 denied the legal basis for Beijing's claim to nearly all of the sea, parts of which are also claimed by neighbouring nations.

Beijing rejected the ruling as "waste paper" and asserted its right to declare an Air Defence Identification Zone controlling flights over the area.

Rice "stressed the importance of all parties taking steps to reduce tensions. To avoid taking actions that... could raise the risk of miscalculation", the official said.

Instead, Rice called on Beijing to use the ruling as an opportunity to "reinvigorate diplomacy" in the region, he added.

In remarks before the meetings Monday, Fan Changlong, vice chairman of China's Central Military Commission warned that ties between the two powers could easily fray.

"We should be honest with ourselves that deep down in this relationship we're still faced with obstacles and challenges," he said, adding that military ties had been "impacted by some complicated and some sensitive factors".

"If we do not properly handle these factors it will very likely disturb and undermine this steady momentum of our military-to-military relationship," he warned.

Beijing objects to an agreement by Washington and Seoul to deploy a US missile defence system to South Korea.

Rice told Fan the move was "purely a defensive measure" and "not aimed at any other party other than North Korea and the threat it poses," the official said.


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Previous Report
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China victory as SE Asian nations go easy on sea row
Vientiane (AFP) July 25, 2016
Southeast Asian nations Monday ducked direct criticism of Beijing over its claims to the South China Sea, in a diluted statement produced after days of disagreement that gives the superpower a diplomatic victory. The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) avoided mention of a ruling by a UN-backed tribunal in early July that rejected China's territorial claims and infuriate ... read more


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