Quiet, don’t tell anyone
China’s
Island Construction in South China Sea No Threat, Says Foreign Minister
Foreign Minister Wang Yi says work
is lawful, necessary and in China’s ‘own yard’
By Jeremy Page in the Wall Street Journal
BEIJING—China’s foreign minister
defended his government’s efforts to reclaim and develop land around disputed
reefs and islands in the South China Sea, saying the work was “necessary” and
posed no threat to other nations.
“This construction does not target
or affect anyone,” Wang Yi said at a news conference Sunday on the sidelines of
an annual meeting of parliament.
“We are not like some countries who
engage in illegal construction in another person’s house, and we do not accept
criticism from others when we are merely building facilities in our own yard.
We have every right to do things that are lawful and justified.”
Satellite images show China has significantly expanded
reclamation and construction work on several reefs it controls in the disputed Spratly Islands in the past two
years, raising fresh concerns in the U.S. and Asia about increasing Chinese
assertiveness in the region.
U.S. officials have spoken out in
recent weeks against the construction work, which defense experts say could
form a network of island fortresses to help enforce Chinese control of most of
the South China Sea—one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.
Vietnam publicly protested
China’s reclamation work last
week. Vietnam and other countries with South China Sea claims have also built
infrastructure on islands and reefs they control, but on a much smaller scale
than China, U.S. officials and defense experts say.
China’s claims cover almost all of
the South China Sea, and overlap with those of Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei,
Taiwan and the Philippines—a U.S. treaty ally. Many of those countries have
bolstered defense ties with the U.S. in recent years in response to what they
see as Beijing’s enhanced efforts to enforce its claims.
In the past year, China has tried to
improve relations with its neighbors by unveiling plans for massive investment
in roads, pipelines, ports and other infrastructure that it says will help to
build new overland and maritime trade routes between Asia and Europe.
Mr. Wang said China had made
progress in negotiations with India over their disputed Himalayan border,
without giving details. China lodged an official protest last month when Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited one of the disputed border areas.
Mr. Wang also didn’t rule out
inviting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to a military parade in China
marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. Asked if Mr. Abe would
come, he said all world leaders were welcome at the parade “as long as they
come in sincerity.” But he reiterated China’s stance that Japan needed to
reflect on its wartime aggression.
Asked if North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un would attend the parade, on what would be his first visit to China
since taking power in late 2011, Mr. Wang said the two sides would have to see
when it was “convenient” for their leaders to meet.
Poster’s comments:
1) One good
typhoon will take care of things in the end.
2) Playing
God is an impossible task. Imposing one’s will over time can get very consuming
in so many ways.
3) Let them
waste their vast National wealth on these poor areas in the meantime.
4) That many
humans on these new “islands” will probably die is such a shame.
5) Think of
it as perspective, like how quick or long a period of time do you wish to
consider?
6) In the
meantime, let normal commerce proceed and sort things out as it always does.
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