White House binabalaan ang China tungkol sa South China Sea - Rise Up, Philippines!

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

White House binabalaan ang China tungkol sa South China Sea

The new U.S. administration of President Donald Trump vowed on Monday that the United States would prevent China from taking over territory in international waters in the South China Sea, something Chinese state media has warned would require Washington to "wage war."

Signaling Donald Trump’s tough stance against Beijing on Monday, spokesman Sean Spicer said “the US is going to make sure we protect our interests” in the South China Sea.

“If those islands are, in fact, in international waters and not part of China proper, yeah, we’ll make sure we defend international interests from being taken over by one country.”

China lays claim to a vast extent of the South China Sea within a so-called “nine dash line,” including waters claimed by several of its neighbors.

Under president Barack Obama’s administration that preceded Trump’s, Washington insisted it was neutral on the legal question of sovereignty over the islets, reefs and shoals.

But, while calling for the dispute to be resolved under international law, the US supported freedom of navigation by sending naval patrols through Chinese-claimed turf.

Last week, former ExxonMobil chief executive and secretary of state nominee Rex Tillerson suggested a hardening of this stance, calling China’s building of bases on the disputed islands illegal.

“We’re going to have to send China a clear signal that, first the island building stops, and second, your access to those islands is also not going to be allowed,” he said.

Tillerson’s remarks raised the prospect of a confrontation between the world’s two greatest powers, and Spicer did nothing from the White House podium to walk them back.

He also took a tough line on trade, returning to Trump’s campaign theme that existing rules favor Chinese exports to the United States and cost American jobs.

Trump advisers have mulled declaring China a “currency manipulator,” or levying tariffs on Chinese products in a bid offset in the import gap.

Even before taking office, Trump infuriated Beijing accepting a congratulatory phone call from Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen.

The move upended decades of diplomatic precedent in which the US president avoided direct public communication with the island’s leader.

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