‘War inevitable’ unless US backs down: China state paper
‘War inevitable’ unless US backs down: China state paper
"...The
Chinese foreign ministry said on Monday that US surveillance flights
over its islands and reefs posed a threat to peace in the region,
“making it highly possible to lead to misjudgment, which could cause
maritime or air accidents."..."
Mon May 25, 2015 12:22PM
This May 10, 2015 US Navy handout photo shows two
F/A-18 Super Hornets (L and R) and two Royal Malaysian Air Force jets,
flying above the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) operating in
the South China Sea. (AFP photo)
A war
between the United States and China is “inevitable” unless Washington
stops demanding Beijing halt its construction projects in the South
China Sea, a Chinese state-owned newspaper warns.
Washington
accuses Beijing of undergoing a massive “land reclamation” program in
the Spratly archipelago of the South China Sea, and says China’s
territorial claims of the man-made islands could further militarize the
region.
“If the United States’ bottom line is that China has to
halt its activities, then a US-China war is inevitable in the South
China Sea,” The Global Times, an influential newspaper owned by the
ruling Communist Party’s official newspaper the People’s Daily, said in
an editorial Monday.
“The intensity of the conflict will be higher than what people usually think of as ‘friction’,” it warned.
The
paper also asserted that China was determined to finish its
construction work in the South China Sea, calling it Beijing’s “most
important bottom line.”
This
handout photo taken on March 16, 2015 by satellite imagery provider
Digital Globe shows a satellite image of vessels purportedly dredging
sand at Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands in the disputed South China
Sea. (AFP photo) Tensions have been rising
between Washington and Beijing over China’s activities in the disputed
waterway and US surveillance flights over the islands.
“We do not
want a military conflict with the United States, but if it were to come,
we have to accept it,” said The Global Times, which is among China’s
most nationalist newspapers.
Beijing last week said it was
“strongly dissatisfied” after a US spy plane defied multiple warnings by
the Chinese navy and flew over the Fiery Cross Reef, where China is
reportedly building an airfield and other installations.
The Spratly group of islands in the South China Sea, west of Palawan (AFP Photo)The
Chinese foreign ministry said on Monday that US surveillance flights
over its islands and reefs posed a threat to peace in the region,
“making it highly possible to lead to misjudgment, which could cause
maritime or air accidents."
A US Navy P-8 Poseidon aircraft was warned by the Chinese navy as it approached Fiery Cross Reef.Washington
does not recognize China’s sovereignty in the disputed areas and is
weighing sending surveillance aircraft and warships to test its
territorial claims.
"That would be the next step," Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren said on Thursday.
A
US Marine amphibious assault vehicle (AAV) makes its way to shore after
leaving an amphibious transport dock ship during a landing exercise
some 220 kilometers east of the Scarborough Shoal in the South China
Sea. (AFP photo) The Pentagon's annual report
to Congress this month cast China as a threat to regional and
international peace and stability. It questioned the transparency of
Chinese defense, cyber and space programs.
For the first time, a
section was devoted to China’s building projects in the South China Sea,
which it warned were expanding rapidly.
China’s territorial
claims in the South China Sea overlap with those of Brunei, Malaysia,
Vietnam and Taiwan, and more specifically the Philippines.
The United States is treaty-bound to defend the Philippines in any possible conflict with China.
HRJ/HRJ