USS Fort Worth (Reuters file)
When the
The USS Fort Worth, one of the most modern ships in the US navy,
dispatched a reconnaissance drone and a Seahawk helicopter to patrol the
airspace, according to a little-noticed statement on the navy's website.
While the navy didn't mention China 's
rapid land reclamation in the Spratlys, the ship's actions were a demonstration
of US capabilities in the event Beijing declares
an Air Defense Identification Zone in the area -- a move experts and some US military
officials see as increasingly likely.
"It's not inevitable but if we are betting paychecks
I'll bet that they will eventually declare one, I just don't know when,"
said a senior US commander familiar with the situation in Asia.
ADIZs are not governed by formal treaties or laws but are
used by some nations to extend control beyond national borders, requiring
civilian and military aircraft to identify themselves or face possible military
interception.
Chinese military facilities now under construction on Fiery
Cross Reef in the Spratlys, including a 3,000-meter (10,000-foot) runway and
airborne early warning radars, could be operational by the year-end, said the US commander,
who declined to be identified.
Recent satellite images also show reclamation work on Subi
Reef creating landmasses that, if joined together, could make space for a
similar-sized airstrip.
Growing concern in Washington
that China might impose air
and sea restrictions in the Spratlys once it completes work on its seven
artificial islands is likely to be on the agenda when US Secretary of State John Kerry meets Chinese
leaders in Beijing
this weekend for previously scheduled talks.
Tough to enforce
Asia's rising power claims sovereignty over most of the South China Sea , through which $5 trillion in ship-borne
trade passes every year. The Philippines ,
Vietnam , Malaysia , Taiwan
and Brunei
also have overlapping claims.
Enforcing such an ADIZ would be difficult even with two
airstrips capable of handling fighter planes in the Spratlys, as well as an
expanded airstrip on Woody island in the disputed Paracel island chain further
north because of the distances involved, regional military officials and
experts said.
The Spratlys for example lie more than 1,100 km (680 miles)
from the Chinese mainland, putting China 's well-equipped airbases
along its coastline well out of reach.
"Even with the new reclamations, it is going to be a
stretch for China to
routinely enforce such a zone that far south," said Richard Bitzinger, a
regional security analyst at Singapore 's
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
The Japanese and US military ignore the ADIZ above the East
China Sea, as does Japan's two major carriers, ANA Holdings and Japan Airlines.
A study produced by the independent US Congressional
Research Service earlier this year noted that, while China 's air force actively monitors
that zone with ground radar from its coastline, it had generally shown
restraint in enforcement.
Risk of escalation
The South China Sea might prove more problematic for China given the complexity of the dispute and
the possibility of challenges from the US navy and air force.
Indeed, on Tuesday, a US official said the Pentagon was
considering sending military aircraft and ships to assert freedom of navigation
around the Chinese-made islands.
On Friday it accused the Philippines
of working together with the United States
to "exaggerate the China
threat" over the Spratlys.
Zhang Baohui, a mainland security expert at Hong Kong's Lingnan University ,
said he was worried about the risk of confrontation from any US show of
force.
"It's reckless," he said, referring to Washington 's latest
plans.
"It has a built-in dynamic for unintended
escalation," he added. "Are they willing to take the consequences of
this escalation?"
At sea, tensions are already apparent.
The naval statement about the USS Fort Worth, which can also
hunt submarines and support amphibious landings, noted the ship
"encountered multiple People's Liberation Army-Navy warships" during
its patrol. It did not go into detail.
"Our interactions with Chinese ships continue to be
professional and (the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea) helps clarify
intentions and prevent miscommunication," Commander Matt Kawas, the Fort Worth 's commanding
officer, said in the statement.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/110624/us-china-set-for-high-stakes-rivalry-in-skies-above-south-china-sea
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