Anonymous ID: bd894c March 1, 2021, 5:44 p.m. No.13082468   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2613 >>2712 >>2802

BEIJING BOLSTERS THE ROLE OF THE CHINA COAST GUARD

 

Beijing’s South China Sea moves have ramped up with the passing of a law allowing the China Coast Guard (CCG) to fire on what it identifies as illegal foreign vessels in waters under its jurisdiction. By virtue of China’s nine-dash line claim, this law applies to the entire South China Sea. Given that China’s claims are opposed by other South China Sea claimants as well as numerous non-claimant countries, the law has proven controversial and raises concerns over whether it will increase the risk of confrontation and conflict in the disputed waters.

 

The Law

 

On January 22, the standing committee of China’s National People’s Congress passed a new law empowering the CCG to employ “all necessary means” to stop or prevent threats from foreign vessels and specifying the circumstances under which different weapons, “handheld, shipborne, or airborne,” can be deployed, as well as allowing it to demolish structures built by other claimants in areas China considers its own. This new law is another manifestation of the CCG’s expanding role. The roles and practices of the CCG have generally been in line with those of other coast guards around the world. This specific law, however, lays out the powers and duties of the CCG in so called “jurisdictional waters,” which include the highly contested areas in the South China Sea. For now, the law amounts to a figurative shot across the bows of other claimants—but that shot could soon be literal.

 

Weaponizing the Coast Guard

 

Coast guards are not usually military forces but law enforcement agencies whose primary roles are constabulary. They are generally armed with machine guns or, at most, medium-calibre deck guns. The U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) is regulated and defined by Title 14 of the United States Code enacted by Congress. It employs various types of small arms such as handguns, shotguns, rifles, and machine guns. The USCG is both a law enforcement agency and branch of the U.S. armed forces, and during times of war or conflict, assets from the coast guard can be transferred to the U.S. Navy. The Japan Coast Guard (JCG) has been engaged in a variety of activities including criminal investigations, maritime security, and search and rescue operations. The Japan Coast Guard Law (Act No. 28 of 27 April 27, 1948, amended by Act No. 71 of 5 September 2012) provides that JCG officers and their assistants may carry a weapon to perform their duties.

 

The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) was formed in 2004 and is equivalent to a coast guard. In its initial stages, the MMEA emulated the practices of the USCG and the JCG. The MMEA can be placed under the command of the Malaysian Armed Forces in times of crisis. Most of its ships originally belonged to the Royal Malaysian Navy and the Marine Police, but it has also received patrol boats from the Fisheries Department and Customs Department. Many of its Offshore Patrol Vessels are equipped with medium-range weapons, but others have only small guns for self-defense and law enforcement. The MMEA Act 2004, Part III, details the functions and powers of the agency, which allow it to stop, enter, board, inspect, and search any place, structure, vessel, or aircraft and to detain any vessel or aircraft. These powers are applicable within Malaysia’s maritime zones.

 

Although coast guards around the world, including the USCG, JCG, and MMEA, carry small arms on board for law enforcement and self-defense, these practices have not been as controversial as those of the CCG. The primary question surrounding the weaponization of China’s coast guard is not the kinds of weapon employed, but whether the circumstances under which it is allowed to use them comply with international practices and standards. That the new law allows the use of weapons against foreign ships at reefs claimed by China is of serious concern to other claimants and users of the South China Sea. The fact that the law authorizes the destruction of structures built by other claimants even further bolsters the CCG’s capability to safeguard national sovereignty, security, and maritime rights in the disputed areas of the South China Sea at the expense of other claimants. The new CCG law’s application over disputed areas will raise additional complications and have operational implications for other vessels, including those of the MMEA and the Royal Malaysian Navy, operating in the area. It also shows that China is increasing its presence and might in the South China Sea.

 

https://amti.csis.org/beijing-bolsters-the-role-of-the-china-coast-guard/

Anonymous ID: bd894c March 1, 2021, 6:03 p.m. No.13082638   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2712 >>2802

China now has world's largest navy as Beijing advances towards goal of a ‘world-class' military by 2049, says US DoD

 

China now has the largest navy in the world, an expansion driven by Beijing’s aspirations to “return” the country to a position of strength and leadership on the world stage, the US Department of Defense (DoD) said in its 2020 report on military and security developments involving China.

 

Published on 1 September the report, often referred to as the ‘China Military Power Report’, states that the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) now has “a battle force of approximately 350 platforms, including major surface combatants, submarines, ocean-going amphibious ships, mine warfare ships, aircraft carriers, and fleet auxiliaries”, compared with the US Navy’s (USN’s) 293 ships using the same measure.

 

Although the cut-off date for the Pentagon assessment was the end of 2019 and developments have continued apace through 2020, the 200 page-long report provides an authoritative source of timescales and numbers for a number of significant capabilities.

The report notes progress in the construction of the PLAN’s third carrier, which in comparison with the two already in service “will be larger and fitted with a catapult launch system”. It assesses that the third carrier will enter service in 2023 and be operational by 2024 and also reports that development continues on the fifth-generation FC-31/J-31 multi-role fighter aircraft “for export or as a future naval fighter for the PLAN's next class of aircraft carriers”, largely confirming persistent rumours.

 

https://www.janes.com/defence-news/news-detail/china-now-has-worlds-largest-navy-as-beijing-advances-towards-goal-of-a-world-class-military-by-2049-says-us-dod

Anonymous ID: bd894c March 1, 2021, 6:07 p.m. No.13082669   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2712 >>2802

South China Sea: Satellite images show China building 'full-blown military bases' on artificial islands

 

20 Feb, 2021 08:06 PM

 

Worrying new satellite imagery suggests China is building "full-blown military bases" on controversial artificial islands in the South China Sea.

 

A report by geospatial software company Simularity has revealed what appears to be infrastructure for radars, antennae mounts and what could be a potential military base on Mischief Reef.

 

Classified as an atoll – a ring-shaped coral reef – located 250km from the Philippines, the landmass has been occupied and controlled by the People's Republic of China since 1995.

The images show the construction in seven areas between May 2020 and February 2021.

 

One image dated May 7, 2020 clearly shows an empty plot of space, which is now occupied by a 16 metre-wide cylindrical structure which Simularity claims could be a "possible antennae mount structure".

 

Another shot also shows a concrete structure with a spherical radome – a weatherproof enclosure used to protect a radar antennae – cover nearby. Simularity states this could "possibly be a fixed radar structure".

 

Other sites are still mid-construction or have been cleared for further development.

 

Dr Jay Batongbacal, Director of the Institute for Maritime Affairs Law of the Sea in the University of the Philippines, says the new infrastructure suggests China is digging in.

 

"They're basically adding on survey lens equipment, apparently radars – there's already a lot of them in the reef in the first place," he told Philippine broadcaster ANC.

 

"The addition of new radars appears to indicate they're really expanding the capabilities of this artificial island. And then the fact it is continuing despite everything that has been going on in the rest of the world, it really indicates the intention of China to really fully develop these artificial islands into full-blown military bases."

 

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/south-china-sea-satellite-images-show-china-building-full-blown-military-bases-on-artificial-islands/DAM22R4VYYCKYAZRPRION7ISXU/

Anonymous ID: bd894c March 1, 2021, 6:11 p.m. No.13082700   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2712 >>2802

Chinese Military to Hold Month-Long Drill in Occupied South China Sea

 

The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) will begin military exercises in the South China Sea — which China illegally claims is entirely within its territory — on Monday, in a move Chinese social media framed as a message to the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden.

 

China’s claims in the South China Sea span over the sovereign territory of five countries: Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines, and Taiwan. The government of the Philippines sued China at the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Hague, a venue open only to state claimants, and received a favorable ruling in 2016 which affirmed the illegality of Beijing’s claims. China has since openly vowed to defy the ruling and the Philippines, under a new presidential administration, has done little to challenge China’s continued presence in its waters.

 

Recent satellite images suggest China has embarked upon further illegal construction operations in parts of Vietnam and the Philippines throughout the time of the Chinese coronavirus pandemic, when the territorial dispute had largely disappeared from news headlines.

 

The state-run Global Times newspaper announced the month-long military drills in the sea on Sunday and framed them as a message to Washington, more than one to Manila or Hanoi. The Chinese military will ban all non-PLA ships from entering the territory used for the drill for the entire month of March.

 

“The exercises come at a time when the US has started to again frequently conduct close-up reconnaissance operations on China’s coastal regions as well as on hydrological environments in the South China Sea,” the Global Times noted. The U.S. Navy has regularly conducted what are known as “Freedom of Navigation Operations” (FONOPs) in the South China Sea for years, meant to challenge the idea that the territory in question is exclusively Chinese. The FONOPs are conducted openly and legally.

 

The Global Times appeared to take issue not with the FONOPs, but with alleged “reconnaissance” exercises by both the United States and France, accusing them of “eavesdropping” on the PLA. The newspaper concluded, citing Communist Party-approved “experts,” that China should “enhance combat preparedness” to confront the U.S. Military.

 

Perhaps in response to China’s announcement, Taiwan — a sovereign state that China claims illegally as a rogue province — announced live-fire exercises in the South China Sea on Monday. Focus Taiwan noted that the country had enhanced its military exercises and increased the presence of its Coast Guard in disputed territory in response to growing numbers of illegal Chinese aircraft excursions into Taiwanese airspace since the inauguration of President Joe Biden.

 

“The drills are being staged amid almost daily flights by Chinese military aircraft into airspace around Taiwan, in particular in the southwest part of Taiwan’s Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) near the Pratas Islands in recent months,” Focus Taiwan noted.

Chinese activity in the sovereign territory of Taiwan has also recently caused alarm. The South China Sea Chronicle Initiative (SCSCI), a non-governmental organization (NGO), published images last week of what appeared to be a surface-to-air missile base built by the Chinese on an island close to Vietnamese waters. Similar images found ongoing illegal Chinese construction in the Philippines in the past year.

 

https://www.breitbart.com/asia/2021/03/01/chinese-military-hold-month-long-drill-occupied-south-china-sea/

Anonymous ID: bd894c March 1, 2021, 6:32 p.m. No.13082830   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Satellite Photos Show China Building Missile Base near Vietnam Border

 

A non-governmental organization called South China Sea Chronicle Initiative (SCSCI) published satellite photos on Wednesday that show China building a surface-to-air missile base near the Vietnamese border.

 

Another possible missile base was detected this month. The Vietnamese government said it is working to verify the reports

 

The second base has reportedly been under construction since last June. Analysts believe the Chinese are also planning to build airbases in the region, but have yet to obtain satellite photos of their construction.

 

Voice of America News (VOA) on Friday described the missile bases as “alarming” in the eyes of the Vietnamese government, and quoted analysts who said Hanoi was right to be worried, given Vietnam’s past conflicts with China and current tensions in the South China Sea:

 

“This is a signal that China is preparing for war along its borders,” said Alexander Vuving, professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies in Hawaii. “It’s a sign that China is preparing for war, maybe not today, not tomorrow but in the long term.”

 

China weathered border skirmishes last year with India following increased military presence and bristled as the navy of its superpower rival the United States passed warships 10 times last year in seas near the Chinese coast. Potential “competition” with the United States would draw in other Asian countries, Vuving said.

In October, Chinese President Xi Jinping urged troops to think about readying for war.

 

Vietnam is one of several nations that disputes China’s illegal claim to control almost the entirety of the South China Sea. In Vietnam’s case, the disputed territory includes valuable natural gas deposits Vietnam wants to develop in partnership with American and Japanese companies.

 

Chinese maritime forces scuttled a joint drilling project between Vietnam’s state energy company PetroVietnam and its Russian counterpart Rosneft last summer, and blocked a deal between PetroVietnam and Spain’s Repsol company a few years before that, in part by credibly threatening to use force against the Vietnamese ventures.

 

The Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) reported last week that Vietnam is shoring up its own defenses in the South China Sea, including significant fortification of its bases in the Spratly Islands. Some of these improvements appear to be concrete emplacements that could hold surface-to-air missile launchers. CSIS cited reports that Vietnam is considering equipping its bases with Russian- and Israeli-made missiles and rocket artillery that could strike nearby Chinese bases.

 

On the other hand, Vietnam appealed for peace in the South China Sea on Thursday after China objected to U.S. Navy ships conducting freedom of navigation patrols near the Spratly and Paracel islands. Vietnam invoked the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which the United States says it is upholding by securing the freedom of international navigation through waters illegally claimed by Beijing.

 

China increased tensions in the South China Sea last week by passing a “Coast Guard Law” that explicitly authorizes its coast guard to fire on foreign vessels and create “temporary exclusion zones” which foreign vessels are forbidden from entering. On Friday, Japan countered by announcing a similar policy for its own coast guard ships stationed around the Senkaku Islands, another chain the Chinese are attempting to control by force. 

 

https://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2021/02/26/satellite-photos-show-china-building-missile-base-near-vietnam-border/