Author Topic: Toward a New Maritime Strategy in the South China Sea  (Read 267 times)

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Toward a New Maritime Strategy in the South China Sea
« on: June 22, 2018, 11:40:21 am »
Toward a New Maritime Strategy in the South China Sea

How the US can reformulate its approach to China in the maritime domain.
By Patrick M. Cronin and Melodie Ha
June 22, 2018


China’s attempts at unilaterally changing the status quo in maritime Asia are most visible in the South China Sea, where previously small land features are now burgeoning military outposts. The United States needs to retool its approach to China in the Western Pacific and move toward a new maritime strategy.

China’s buildup of armed forces and installations on disputed islands in the South China Sea highlights twin ambitions of solidifying expansive territorial claims and demonstrating Beijing’s growing military reach out to the Second Island Chain and beyond. Landing long-range H-6K bombers on China’s largest outpost in the Paracel archipelago could presage similar moves on the Subi, Mischief, and Fiery Cross Reefs in the Spratly Islands. The fortification of South China Sea installations is both a byproduct of and a means to so-called gray-zone challenges to the existing order. China seeks to change the status quo through incremental actions, mobilizing both military and paramilitary forces, and threats of coercion — but stopping short of steps that might trigger conflict.

https://thediplomat.com/2018/06/toward-a-new-maritime-strategy-in-the-south-china-sea/