Sunday, November 26, 2023

China Confronts U.S. Warship as Tension Grows Over Flashpoint

China Confronts U.S. Warship as Tension Grows Over Flashpoint: "Drove it Away"

Matthew Tostevin


China's military said it had driven a U.S. warship from waters it claims in the 

South China Sea at the weekend and accused the United States of being the 

"biggest destroyer" of peace and stability in the region.

The incident highlighted the tensions in the flashpoint region and was the first such 

confrontation since Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden met on the 

sidelines of an Asia-Pacific summit in San Francisco earlier this month and reported progress 

on some of the issues that have strained ties between the global rivals.

China's state-run People's Daily quoted Senior Colonel Tian Junli, spokesman for the People's

 Liberation Army's Southern Theater Command, as saying the guided-missile destroyer USS

 Hopper had entered China's territorial waters illegally on Saturday. It said the incident occurred

 near the Paracel Islands, which China calls the Xisha Islands.

"The theater command has organized air and naval forces to follow and monitor it, and drove

 it away according to law," he was quoted as saying.

Tian sharply criticized the United States, labeling the action a "serious violation" of China's 

sovereignty and security. Tian described the United States as a "security risk maker in the 

South China Sea" and the "biggest destroyer" of peace and stability in the region. He said 

troops in the region would remain on high alert.

China's claims over almost the entirety of the South China Sea have long been a 

point of contention, bringing it into confrontation not only with the United States but 

also with other regional claimants, including the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, 

Malaysia, and Brunei. Beijing has consistently rejected the 2016 ruling by The 

Permanent Court of Arbitration, which stated that China's claims in the South China

 Sea have no legal basis.

The Hopper had "asserted navigational rights in the South China Sea near the Paracel Islands, consistent with international law," according to the U.S. Navy, cited by Reuters.


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