The US Navy deliberately avoided military drills or other
actions that could have further inflamed tensions with Beijing
during a patrol last week near islands China
has built in the South China Sea , US officials
said.
"We wanted to assert our rights under international
law, but not to the point where we were poking the Chinese in the eye, or where
it would unnecessarily escalate the situation," said a US official,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
The official said the destroyer USS Lassen turned off its
fire control radars while transiting within 12 nautical miles of Subi Reef and
avoided any military operations during that time, including helicopter launches
or other drills.
Numerous experts said this cautious approach could in fact
reinforce China 's claim to
sovereignty over the artificial islands in the Spratly Islands
archipelago.
But the US
official disputed that assertion.
"It was a freedom-of-navigation operation that was not
meant to inflame the situation, which is why they did the transit the way they
did," the US
official said.
The Lassen's commanding officer, Commander Robert C. Francis
Jr., told reporters on Thursday that his ship went within six to seven nautical
miles of the artificial island.
He said the radar was operating normally at the time for
"situational awareness," and acknowledged the US Navy did not fly
helicopters. He described it as both a freedom-of-navigation and a
"transit" operation.
But analysts said that if the Lassen failed to take such
actions or even to loiter or collect intelligence within the zone, the
operation would have resembled what is known as "innocent passage,"
and could have reinforced rather than challenged China 's claim to a territorial
limit around the reef.
"Innocent passage" occurs when one country's ship
quickly transits another's territorial waters - and can only take place in
waters belonging to another country.
"If the Lassen didn't do anything but transit, then
this Freedom of Navigation Operation didn't actually assert what they had led
us to believe it was supposed to: that Subi Reef doesn't get a territorial
sea," said Greg Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think-tank.
Innocent passage
Julian Ku, a professor of constitutional law at Hofstra University ,
wrote in the Lawfare blog that Washington
had chosen the weakest type of freedom-of-navigation operation available,
apparently at the bidding of the White House.
"(B)y limiting the USS Lassen's transit to an 'innocent
passage,' the US is
implicitly recognizing that China
is entitled to a 12 nm (nautical mile) territorial sea around its artificial
island on Subi Reef," he said.
The White House declined comment on details of the
operation. A senior administration official called it "consistent with the
way we regularly conduct freedom-of-navigation operations globally."
Underscoring the issue's complexity, Pentagon officials have
given conflicting descriptions over the last week of the Lassen's maneuver.
A US
official speaking to Reuters last week described the patrols as an
"innocent passage" operation, but later said that had been a mistake.
Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis insisted to reporters
on Wednesday that the patrol was not an "innocent passage." Pressed
further on the issue on Thursday, he declined to explicitly restate that
position or elaborate.
Writing on the website of The National Interest magazine,
Bonnie Tyler, senior adviser for Asia at CSIS
and Peter Dutton, director of the China Maritime Studies Institute at the US
Naval War College, offered an explanation for the mixed messages.
They concluded that the operation was a
freedom-of-navigation movement, but carried out as innocent passage, as it also
passed within 12 nautical miles of a China-claimed feature that was entitled to
that territorial limit.
The first US official argued that China -- which described
the US patrol as "illegal" - was not seizing on the absence of
military activities as a sign that Washington now accepted its sovereignty over
the artificial islands.
"It didn't change anything in the way it was received.
What the Chinese took away was that we steamed through what they believe is
their waters," the official said.
In a joint paper, Adam Klein, a fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations, and Mira Rapp Hooper, a senior fellow in the Asia-Pacific
Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, said the lack of
clarity over the operation was a problem.
"If allowed to harden, the widespread belief that the
Lassen conducted innocent passage would be extremely damaging; indeed, it could
make the operation worse than having done nothing at all," they wrote.
"The Pentagon needs to clarify what happened at Subi
Reef -- and, more importantly, what message it intended to send."
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/119855/us-south-china-sea-patrol-sought-to-avoid-provocation-not-goad-china
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