By Frank Fang
January 13, 2022 Updated: January 13, 2022
The
State Department is calling on Beijing to stop its “unlawful and coercive
activities” in the South China Sea after the department
released a study rejecting China’s maritime claims in the sea, which the
Chinese regime continues to push.
“With
the release of this latest study, the United States calls again on the PRC
[People’s Republic of China] to conform its maritime claims to international
law as reflected in the Law of the Sea Convention, to comply with the decision
of the arbitral tribunal in its award of July 12, 2016, in The South China Sea
Arbitration,” the State Department said in a Jan. 12 statement.
China
is currently locking horns with all its South China Sea neighbors—Brunei,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Taiwan—in territorial disputes over
reefs, islands, and atolls in the region.
A 2016
international ruling has already rejected the
regime’s “Nine-dash line” claim to about 85 percent of the South China Sea’s
2.2 million square miles. The ruling states that China’s claims had no
historical basis and that Beijing had violated the sovereignty of the
Philippines by asserting territorial claims with its artificial islands built
on reefs and sea rocks.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has
rejected the ruling. In recent years, the Chinese regime has violated the
ruling by building military outposts on the artificial islands and reefs in the
areas that it claims. It has also deployed coast
guard ships and Chinese fishing boats to intimidate foreign vessels, block
access to waterways, and seize shoals and reefs.
The
47-page study (pdf), put together by
the State Department’s Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and
Scientific Affairs, states why China’s four assertions, including sovereignty
claims over maritime features, are “inconsistent with international law.”
China’s
claim of more than 100 features in the South China Sea that are submerged below
the sea surface at high tide is “beyond the lawful limits of any state’s
territorial sea,” according to the study.
Beijing’s
use of maritime features to claim four “island groups,” including Taiwan’s
Pratas Island, also known as Dongsha Qundao, didn’t meet “the geographic
criteria for using straight baselines” under the 1982 U.N. Convention on the
Law of the Sea.
“The
overall effect of these maritime claims is that the PRC unlawfully claims
sovereignty or some form of exclusive jurisdiction over most of the South China
Sea,” the study reads. “These claims gravely undermine the rule of law in the
oceans and numerous universally-recognized provisions of international law
reflected in the Convention.”
The
study is an update of another State Department study that was published in
2014.
The United
States formally rejected Beijing’s
claims in the South China Sea on July 13, 2020, as former Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo said the claims were “completely unlawful” and that China was
conducting a “campaign of bullying to control” the area.
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