Coast Guard offers U.S. new tool in disputed South China Sea
Brunei, China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam claim all or parts of the sea. They value mainly it for fisheries and undersea fossil fuel deposits. China has alarmed the other governments since 2010, when it began reclaiming land to expand tiny islets for military installations. China operates Asia’s strongest armed forces.
Law enforcement
U.S. officials may have sent the coast guard vessel to stress “law enforcement” and head off any fears of naval conflict, said Jonathan Spangler, director of the South China Sea Think Tank in Taipei.
>China and Taiwan send their own coast guard vessels for law enforcement, he added. Among the would-be crimes: drug traffic and illegal fishing.
“It would be reasonable to try and frame any sort of operations in the South China Sea or any sort of cooperation with South China Sea littoral states as cooperation on law enforcement rather than cooperation on maritime defense,” Spangler said.
U.S. officials in turn see Chinese forces as more than a navy, said Alexander Huang, strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taiwan. They follow its navy, coast guard and armed fishing boats that can be used for Chinese government-sponsored work, he said.
“I think the use of the United States Coast Guard is part of dealing with the low intensity, short of naval engagement, but involving the Chinese maritime militia or the Chinese fishing boats or weaponized fishing boats,” Huang said.
Why the Philippines
The cutter reached port in Manila on Wednesday to “share experiences” on maritime law enforcement, the U.S. Indo Pacific Command statement added, quoting the vessel’s commanding officer.
The Philippines, like other Southeast Asian claimants to the sea, lacks the military strength of China. But decades of bilateral agreements plus six years of joint naval exercises with the United States, a former Philippine colonizer, give Manila support.
A world arbitration court backed the Philippines in 2016 by rejecting the legal basis for China’s maritime claims. China, however, still keeps ships at Scarborough Shoal. Over the past half year, scores of Chinese fishing boats have passed near another disputed islet that the Philippines is building up.
The Philippine government is making a “coordinated effort” to balance foreign policy between the superpowers, said Herman Kraft, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines. Philippine defense officials are handling the U.S. side of that equation, including coast guard ties, he said.
“What’s actually interesting is the extent to which they’ve fundamentally allowed the Department of Defense to nurture the relationship with the U.S. military and auxiliary forces,” Kraft said.
This article is published courtesy of the Voice of America (VOA)