The US
sending a spy plane to Singapore
is a calculated attempt to warn China
that it does not have unrestricted privileges to operate in international
waters, former CIA officer Larry Johnson told Sputnik on Wednesday.
"It is a calculated risk to remind China that it does
not have an unlimited right to do what it wants in what the United States and
its allies regard as international waters," Johnson told Sputnik.
The US
deployment of the spy plane, Johnson explained, is not intended to heighten
tensions with China but does
represent "old school power projection" which runs the risk of
harming the relationship between Washington
and Beijing .
The United States
should not be surprised if China
sees a US
spy plane stationed in a nearby country as threatening, Johnson noted.
"If the roles were reversed and the United States was in the position of China we most
certainly would interpret such action by the Chinese as a provocation and would
push back," Johnson added.
In October, the naval destroyer USS Lassen sailed within 12
nautical miles of the disputed Spratly archipelago in the South China Sea,
claimed by several regional powers, including China . The Chinese Foreign Ministry
said that the incident was illegal and a violation of China 's
sovereignty.
The United States
has repeatedly warned it does not recognize Chinese claims of sovereignty over
the Spratly Islands . President Barack Obama has on
several occasions called on China
to halt its constriction activities in the region.
At the moment, the US military already conducts
surveillance missions from Japanese and Philippine airfields, while continuing
military patrols in the disputed waters.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=836510
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