The U.S.
military carried out freedom of navigation operations challenging the maritime
claims of China , Iran and
10 other countries last year, asserting its transit rights in defiance of
efforts to restrict passage, a Pentagon report said on Thursday.
The Defense Department's annual Freedom of Navigation Report
to Congress for the 2013 fiscal year showed the U.S. military targeted not only
countries such as Iran, with whom it has no formal relations, but treaty
allies such as the Philippines, too.
The U.S.
military conducted multiple operations targeting China over what Washington believes are
"excessive" claims about its maritime boundaries and its effort to
force foreign warships to obtain permission before peacefully transiting its
territorial seas.
The report covers activity in the 2013 fiscal year that
ended Sept. 30, before the latest tensions over a near mishap between U.S. and Chinese warships in the South China Sea
and Beijing 's declaration of an air defense
identification zone over the East China Sea, which Washington rejected.
The United
States carries out freedom of navigation
operations by sending Navy ships into disputed areas in an effort to show that
the international community has not accepted claims made by one or more
countries.
The operations, which began in 1979, are coordinated by the
State and Defense departments and are meant to be consistent with the U.N. Law
of the Sea Convention, even though Washington
has not formally adopted the agreement.
"The United
States will not ... acquiesce in unilateral acts
of other states designed to restrict the rights and freedoms of the
international community in navigation and overflight," the Pentagon said
in a 1992 Freedom of Navigation report by then-Secretary of Defense Dick
Cheney.
Since 1991, the United States
has conducted more than 300 freedom of navigation operations challenging
maritime claims by 53 different countries worldwide, from Albania , Ecuador
and Denmark to Pakistan and Yemen .
The most frequent U.S. complaint is with countries
that measure the start of their territorial waters by drawing a straight line
between two points on the coast or along offshore islands, thereby enclosing a
vast expanse of sea.
The United States targets about a dozen countries per year
for challenge, with the high ranging to 27 countries in 1998 and dropping into
the low single digits at the height of the U.S. war in Iraq.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/82149/u-s--2013-freedom-of-navigation-operations-targeted-china-and-even-the-philippines
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