(From right) US Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Secretary of State John Kerry and their Australian counterparts Marise Payen and Julie Bishop at their annual two-day meeting in Boston, 13 October 2015. REUTERS
The
According to senior US
officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, Washington is drawing up a plan to sail by
these islands in the coming days or weeks.
The warship or ships would pass within the 12-mile
territorial limit China
claims around the structures to demonstrate that US commanders do not recognize
it.
Meanwhile, after an annual two-day meeting, the US and
Australian defense and foreign ministers said they do not have a view on the
legal arguments of the dispute.
But they warned that they will continue to support freedom
of navigation and send ships and planes through what they regard as internationals
water in the region.
US Defense Secretary Ash Carter joined Secretary of State
John Kerry and their Australian counterparts Marise Payen and Julie Bishop in Boston .
"Australia
and America
both want to sustain and renew an Asia-Pacific regional security architecture
where everyone rises and everyone prospers," Carter said.
"But make no mistake," he warned "the United
States will fly, sail, and operate wherever international law allows, as we do
around the world.
"And the South China Sea
is not and will not be an exception."
Carter said this was not just a US
commitment, but was shared by Washington 's
major regional allies Japan ,
the Philippines , India , and Vietnam .
Bishop said Washington and Canberra were "on
the same page" over the dispute.
"We do not take sides on the various territorial
claims, but we urge all parties to not act unilaterally, to not act in a way
that would escalate tensions," she said.
Bishop expressed support for "the principles of freedom
of navigation and freedom of overflight."
"We continue to work together to press those principles
on all claimants in the South China Sea and
elsewhere," she added.
On Saturday, China
vowed to continue building on the disputed reefs and said construction had
finished on two lighthouses in areas claimed by smaller rivals.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has said Beijing will not militarize its new
structures, but satellite images show they have runways that could be used by
air force jets.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/118894/us-and-australia-warn-china-on-sea-access
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