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China accuses US of ‘ill intentions’ in South China Sea

The USS Montgomery, an Independence-class combat ship, was tracked by PLA forces on Jan. 25 sailing in an area adjacent to where China controls a man-made island without Beijing’s authorization.

Philip J. Heijmans and Lucille Liu (Bloomberg)
Beijing, China
Wed, January 29, 2020

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China accuses US of ‘ill intentions’ in South China Sea A US Navy hover craft speeds past the USS Wasp, US Navy multipurpose amphibious assault ship, during the amphibious landing exercises as part of the annual joint US-Philippines military exercise on the shores of San Antonio town, facing the South China sea, Zambales province on April 11, 2019. (AFP/Ted Aljibe). Usage: 0 (AFP/Ted Aljibe)

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hina’s armed forces accused the US of “ill intentions” in the South China Sea after an American warship entered waters near the contested Spratly Islands last week.

“The US ship’s deliberate provocation during the traditional lunar Chinese New Year festival, which harbored ill intentions, is a naked act of navigational hegemony,” Senior Colonel Li Huamin, spokesman for the People’s Liberation Army’s southern command, said in a statement Tuesday. “China has indisputable sovereignty over the South China Sea and its islands, and no matter how the US deliberately schemes, comes up with new tricks, provokes and stirs up trouble, its efforts will be fruitless.”

The USS Montgomery, an Independence-class combat ship, was tracked by PLA forces on Jan. 25 sailing in an area adjacent to where China controls a man-made island without Beijing’s authorization.

China, Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines each claim sovereignty over some or all of the Spratly Islands.

Innocent Passage

Lieutenant Joe Keiley, spokesman for the US Navy’s Seventh Fleet, said in an email Wednesday that no ship -- civilian or military -- required permission before engaging in “innocent passage” through territorial seas and that the maneuver was consistent with international law. He said the USS Montgomery was sent to challenge such restrictions imposed by China, Vietnam, and Taiwan.

“This freedom of navigation operation upheld the rights, freedoms and lawful uses of the sea,” Keiley said.

The US has increased patrols in the South China Sea since the Pentagon officially labeled China a “strategic competitor” in 2018, as the world’s two biggest economies battle for influence in Asia-Pacific.

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