American, Chinese admirals to hold talks over South China Sea tension

Beijing/Washington, Oct 29

The Chinese and US navies are set to hold high-level talks over tension in the South China Sea after a US warship challenged China’s territorial assertions in the disputed waters this week.

US chief of naval operations Admiral John Richardson and his Chinese counterpart, Admiral Wu Shengli, would hold an hourlong video teleconference today, a US official said.

A spokesman for China’s Ministry of Defence said Wu would resent China’s “solemn position on the US vessel’s entry without permission” into waters in the Spratly archipelago in the South China Sea.

Both officers initiated the meeting to discuss recent operations in the South China Sea as well as naval ties, the US official said. It will be the third such video teleconference between the countries’ naval chiefs.

Beijing rebuked Washington for sending a guided-missile destroyer within 12 nautical miles of one of China’s man-made islands in the Spratly archipelago yesterday, saying it had tracked and warned the USS Lassen and called in the US ambassador to protest.

“We would urge the US side not to continue down the wrong path,” Defence Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun told a regular briefing. “But if they do, we will take all necessary measures in accordance with the need.”

Chinese President Xi Jinping will next week visit Vietnam, another vocal claimant in the South China Sea, and Singapore, while Chinese Defence Minister Chang Wanquan will attend a meeting of Southeast Asian defence ministers in Malaysia.

The patrol was the most significant US challenge yet to territorial limits China claims around its artificial islands in one of the world’s busiest sea lanes.

“Neither the US nor China desires a military conflict, but the key problem is that the core interests of both sides collide in the South China Sea,” said Ni Lexiong, a naval expert at the Shanghai University of Political Science and Law. “It’s hard to see either side backing down.”

Separately, the English-language China Daily newspaper reported that Admiral Harry Harris, commander of US forces in the Pacific, will visit Beijing next week. It cited an unnamed source and gave no further details. Ministry spokesman Yang said the plan was for Harris to visit before the end of the year, and that both sides remained “in communication” about it. He did not elaborate.

A US embassy spokesman declined to comment.

Harris has been highly critical of China’s island building in the Spratlys. This year he said China was using dredges and bulldozers to create a “great wall of sand” in the South China Sea.

China rotates a large number of naval and coastguard vessels through the South China Sea, both for patrols and training missions, security experts say.

Chinese state media said today a “guided-missile destroyer flotilla” under the navy’s South China Sea Fleet carried out a “realistic confrontation training exercise” involving anti-aircraft firing and firing at shore at night. A state-owned news website carried photos from the drills,saying they took place recently in the South China Sea. One picture showed three warships sailing in a row.

Despite criticism of China’s action in the South China Sea, foreign navies from the United States to Europe have sought to build ties with their Chinese counterparts.

A French frigate docked at China’s main South China Sea base of Zhanjiang in the southern province of Guangdong yesterday on a four-day visit. It will participate in a maritime exercise about accidental encounters at sea.

Two Australian warships will also hold exercises with the Chinese navy in the South China Sea next week, Australian Defence Minister Marise Payne said today.