The US State Department said on Friday that
State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said the US position is
that this activity does not add to regional stability.
Recent satellite images show China
has made rapid progress in building an airstrip suitable for military use in
the disputed Spratly
Islands and may be
planning another.
Those moves, along with other reclamations, have caused
alarm around the region and in Washington too,
with the issue dominating a summit of Southeast Asian leaders this week, to China 's
displeasure.
In a teleconference with the US
Chief of Naval Operations Jonathan Greenert, China 's
navy chief Wu Shengli said China 's
building work in the South China Sea would not
affect freedom of navigation or overflight.
"Instead, it will improve the ability in these seas of
public services like weather forecasting and maritime search and rescue,
fulfilling international obligations to maintain the security of international
seas," Wu said, according to a Chinese Defense Ministry statement released
late on Thursday.
"(We) welcome international organizations, the United States
and relevant countries to use these facilities in the future when conditions
are right, to have cooperation on humanitarian search and rescue and disaster
relief," Wu added.
The statement cited Greenert as saying he hoped China could
explain to countries in the region in a timely manner the aim of the building
work. It would also be good for maintaining stability and freedom of navigation
if other countries could use such facilities for joint humanitarian operations,
he said.
Disputes over how to tackle an increasingly assertive stance
by China - an ally of
several Southeast Asian states - in the strategic South
China Sea make the issue the region's biggest potential military
flashpoint.
While the militaries of China
and the United States
have worked hard to improve communication and cooperation, there is still deep
mistrust. In 2013, a US
guided missile cruiser narrowly avoided a collision with a Chinese warship in
the South China Sea .
Wu said US
surveillance operations were "totally out of step" with efforts to
improve their military relations.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/109806/us-says-chinas-activity-in-south-china-sea-wont-help-peace
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