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U.S. Accuses China of 'Destabilizing' Acts in South China Sea

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel warned Beijing Saturday against "destabilizing actions" in the South China Sea, and backed its regional rival Japan's plans to take on a more muscular security role in Asia.

Stressing U.S. commitments to allies and friends in Asia, Hagel called for a peaceful resolution of international disputes and issued a blunt message to China, which was represented by a high-level military delegation at the forum in Singapore.

"In recent months, China has undertaken destabilizing, unilateral actions asserting its claims in the South China Sea," Hagel told fellow defense chiefs, military officials, diplomats and security experts attending the annual Shangri-La Dialogue.

He accused China of restricting the Philippines' access to Scarborough Shoal, putting pressure on Manila's long-standing presence in Second Thomas Shoal, beginning land reclamation at various locations and moving an oil rig into disputed waters with Vietnam.

Hagel said that while the United States does not take sides on rival claims, "we firmly oppose any nation's use of intimidation, coercion, or the threat of force to assert these claims".

"The United States will not look the other way when fundamental principles of the international order are being challenged," he said.

China reacted angrily to Hagel's comments, with Deputy Chief of the General Staff of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Wang Guanzhong describing them as baseless, and further condemning him for making them in public.

"This speech is full of hegemony, full of incitement, threats, intimidation," Wang was quoted as saying by a reporter from state broadcaster China Central Television.

"Moreover (it) is public, several times criticizing China by name, and these kinds of accusations are completely without basis, without reason," Wang said. The military official is due to make his own speech on Sunday.

Tensions have recently flared up in the South China Sea, claimed almost entirely by China, which has lately taken bold steps to enforce what it says are its historical rights.

Four Southeast Asian states -- Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam -- claim parts of the sea, with Manila and Hanoi being the most vocal in opposing China's claims. Taiwan is the sixth claimant.

In the latest outbreak of tensions, Vietnam accused Chinese warships Thursday of pointing weapons at their vessels during an escalating standoff near an oil rig in contested waters. There have also been ramming incidents involving boats from both sides lately.

The Philippines and China are locked in a bitter dispute over the control of islets and reefs in the sea, which straddles vital shipping lanes and is believed to sit atop vast gas deposits.

Manila publicly accused Beijing in May of large-scale reclamation activity at Johnson South Reef which it fears could be an airstrip development.

China is also in dispute with Japan over islands in the East Sea, which Tokyo calls Senkaku and Beijing refers to as Diaoyu.

Last year, China declared an air defense identification zone in the East Sea, including over the outcrops, which are under Japan's administration.

Source: Agence France Presse


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