PACOM boss: China’s South China Sea claims ‘preposterous’

BY DAVID LARTER

141104-N-OX321-008  NAVAL AIR FACILITY ATSUGI, Japan (Nov. 4, 2014) Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr., commander of U.S. Pacific Fleet, speaks to Sailors at Naval Air Facility Atsugi during an all-hands call at the installation’s theater. Harris is on a familiarization tour of shore installations and holding all-hand calls with Sailors in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kegan E. Kay/Released)

Incoming U.S. Pacific Command head Adm. Harry Harris slammed China’s claims in the South China Sea as “outrageous” and “preposterous” in a recent TIME Magazine interview.

China has established a pattern of deliberately provocative actions in recent months and has been unclear about its claims to vast swathes of the South China Sea, Harris said, accusing China of destabilizing the region.

“I have been critical of China for a pattern of provocative actions that they’ve begun in the recent past. Like unilaterally declaring an air-defense identification zone over the East China Sea, parking a mobile oil platform off the Vietnam coast, and their lack of clarity on their outrageous claim — preposterous claim, really — to 90% of the South China Sea,” Harris told Time.

The carrier Carl Vinson, destroyer Gridley , cruiser Bunker Hill, and Malaysian frigate KD Lekir steaming through the South China Sea in May. (Credit: Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class John Philip Wagner)

“All these examples, I think, are inconsistent with international laws and norms. They make China’s neighbors nervous, it increases tensions in the region, and I think they are destabilizing for peace in the region.”

Harris also accused China of building the islands for military purposes, though China has played down the planned military uses of the islands.

“They have manufactured land there at a staggering pace just in the last months. They’ve created about 2,000 acres of these man-made islands,” Harris said. “That’s equivalent to about 1,500 football fields, if I get my math right, and they’re still going.

“They’ve also made massive construction projects on artificial islands for what are clearly, in my point of view, military purposes, including large airstrips and ports.”

A spokesman for the Chinese defense ministry said Tuesday that the islands would be used primarily for more benign purposes, such as disaster mitigation, fisheries protection and weather monitoring,

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