INTL China Philippines maritime standoff escalating on path that could drag US into conflict, analysts warn

jward

passin' thru



Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info

#China #Philippines maritime standoff escalating on path that could drag #US into conflict, analysts warn Last weekend’s clashes between Chinese and Philippine vessels in the South China Sea send troubling signals that their standoff is worsening to a point where lives could be lost, potentially dragging the world’s two most-powerful militaries into open conflict, analysts warn. “The escalatory cycle is worrying,” said @GordianKnotRay Ray Powell, director of SeaLight, a project at the Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation at Stanford University that monitors maritime activities in the South China Sea.

Analysts described Sunday’s clash, in which Chinese Coast Guard water cannons disabled a Philippine boat, as the most serious of four publicized showdowns this year between the two countries in the waters near Second Thomas Shoal, a feature China claims as its territory but where Philippine marines man an outpost on a grounded ship. The Philippine boats were attempting to bring supplies to the badly deteriorating ship, the Sierra Madre, when the Chinese Coast Guard tried to stop them, both countries acknowledge. A Chinese Coast Guard ship “deployed a water cannon against the Philippine supply vessels causing severe damage to (one’s) engines, disabling the vessel and seriously endangering the lives of its crew,” the National Task Force for the West Philippine Sea said in a statement.

While no injuries were reported Sunday, the clash, which also included a collision between Chinese and Philippine vessels, shows that serious injuries or deaths are “certainly possible,” Powell said. And because the Philippines, like nearby Japan and South Korea, has a mutual defense treaty with the United States, deaths of Filipinos could trigger US forces to respond. US officials have repeatedly cited the treaty in public remarks on the South China Sea and the US State Department this week reiterated Washington’s stance following Sunday’s clash. The United States “stands with our Philippine allies in the face of these dangerous and unlawful actions,” the statement said. China’s Foreign Ministry, however, told Washington it has no standing in the dispute, saying “no third party has the right to intervene.” Beijing claims “indisputable sovereignty” over almost all of the South China Sea, including many features hundreds of miles from mainland China. The Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and Taiwan also hold competing claims. In 2016, an international tribunal in The Hague ruled in favor of the Philippines and concluded that China has no legal basis to claim historic rights to the bulk of the South China Sea. But Beijing has ignored the ruling. Flashpoint outpost Second Thomas Shoal, known as Ayungin Shoal to the Philippines and Ren’ai Reef to China, sits in the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone. Manila grounded the Sierra Madre, a World War II-era former US Navy transport ship, on Second Thomas Shoal in 1999 and has manned it with Filipino marines to enforce its claims to the area. But the rusting vessel is falling apart and is badly in need of regular repairs.

The situation on the shoal largely fell out of headlines while China set up military installations on other contested territories in the South China Sea over much of the past decade. And the administration of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte tried to forge new economic ties with Beijing. But President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who took office in 2022, has taken a harder line on Chinese territorial claims and strengthened military cooperation with Washington. Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. told CNN in September that Manila and the rest of the world needed to stand up to what he called Chinese “bullying.” But Beijing has been steadfast in its claim that Manila is illegally occupying the shoal. On Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning accused the Philippines of seriously violating China’s sovereignty and endangering the safety of Chinese vessels and personnel. But analysts counter that Beijing comes across as the aggressor. “China acts, looks like and is being exposed as a bully,” said Carl Schuster, a former director of operations at the US Pacific Command’s Joint Intelligence Center. And Beijing is looking to press its claim, the analysts say. “Recent actions seem to point to the Chinese trying to probe for weaknesses to exploit and test the limit of how far Washington would go for its ally,” Collin Koh, research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) in Singapore, told CNN.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Koh said it may not even take explosive weapons to trigger the US-Philippine mutual defense treaty. “When your water cannon attack actually caused physical damage, injury and potentially death, it begs the question about whether it matters whether you use firearms or just the kinetic force of water to qualify as an ‘armed attack’,” Koh wrote. Any death might not have to be intentional, he said. “Even if the Chinese try their best to avoid vertical escalation, what if there’s an inadvertent loss of lives, or severe injuries? Will that qualify as armed attack?” Koh asked. US involvement Koh, Schuster and others said Washington may have let the situation go too far already, emboldening Beijing to keep up the pressure on Manila to back off on its South China Sea claims. Eric Sayers, a nonresident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, wrote on X that Washington needs to “escalate” things with Beijing.

“They are estimating we won’t because we largely haven’t for the last 13 years since this type of behavior started,” he wrote. Schuster said Washington needs more than State Department statements to dissuade China. “Unless (the US) moves forces into position, Beijing will see no reason to avoid escalation,” he said. Those forces could be direct US resupply of the grounded ship, the Sierra Madre, or at least joint escorts on the Philippine resupply missions, Koh said. And the resupply missions are vital, said Sayers. If Manila can’t get enough supplies to its ship on Second Thomas Shoal, Beijing could be even more assertive, he said. “I think the concerning question is what state is the Sierra Madre in? Does it need to continue to be maintained or is there a risk it could fall off the reef? If so, that is an event that could lead to further escalation and a change in the status quo,” Sayers told CNN.

And he warned that Washington can’t lose sight of the importance of support for Manila even while “the rest of the world is burning,” referring to ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza that appear to be dominating the foreign policy space in the US government. The US needs to demonstrate that Asia is a priority along with Europe and the Middle East, Sayers said. Can Washington “walk and chew gum like my Euro-centric American friends insist?” is a question that needs a strong answer, he wrote.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Philippine military head was aboard a ship harassed by China. Beijing accuses US of stirring trouble​


BY JIM GOMEZ
Updated 5:54 AM EST, December 11, 2023
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MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The head of the Philippine military said Monday he was with his forces aboard a supply boat when it was blasted with a water cannon, surrounded and shoved by Chinese coast guard ships over the weekend in the disputed South China Sea.

China, meanwhile, accused archrival the United States of encouraging the Philippines, its treaty ally, to provoke China for its own purposes, though it provided no direct evidence.

The successive days of heated confrontations underscore China’s determination to assert its claim to virtually the entire South China Sea, despite the possibility of fomenting a larger conflict affecting shipping and other maritime activities in the crucial waterway.

Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that China was escalating its aggression in the contested waters but said it would not deter Filipino forces from defending their territorial interests.

More than 100 official Chinese and other government-linked ships have swarmed the high seas around the contested Second Thomas Shoal, where a marooned Philippine navy ship that Brawner visited has stood for decades. He said their presence was much bigger than in previous months.



“It’s pure aggression,” Brawner said. “I witnessed how many times the big Chinese coast guard and militia ships cut our path. They water-cannoned us, then bumped us. It’s angering.”

“This really needs a diplomatic solution at the higher level,” he said, but added that the armed forces would continue to support front-line troops and protect fishermen.


Brawner, the U.S.-educated chief of the 150,000-member Armed Forces of the Philippines, joined navy personnel in a wooden-hulled supply boat, the Unnaiza Mae 1, which brought Christmas gifts, food and other supplies to a small contingent of Filipino marines and navy personnel stationed aboard the BRP Sierra Madre at Second Thomas Shoal.

Although now crumbling with rust and holes, the slightly listing Sierra Madre remains an actively commissioned Philippine navy ship, meaning any assault on it would be considered an act of war. It has become a fragile symbol of the territorial claims of the Philippines.

Brawner said he conveyed President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s Christmas greetings to the Filipino forces and shared with them a traditional rice lunch.

The United States has repeatedly warned it is obligated to defend the Philippines, its oldest treaty ally in Asia, if Filipino forces, ships or aircraft come under an armed attack, including in the South China Sea. China has warned the U.S. not to meddle in what it says is a purely Asian dispute.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning reinforced that message at a daily briefing Monday, saying the maritime disputes were “issues between the two countries, and no third party has the right to intervene.”

“Recently, the U.S., in order to realize its own geopolitical interests, has encouraged, supported, and cooperated with the Philippines in its violations and provocations in the South China Sea, exaggerating differences and inciting confrontation,” Mao told reporters.

Over the weekend, Philippine officials said the Chinese coast guard and suspected militia ships targeted Philippine vessels two days in a row with water cannon blasts and rammed one of them, causing damage and endangering crew, off Second Thomas Shoal and separately in Scarborough Shoal off the northwestern Philippines.

More than a dozen countries, including the U.S., Japan, the European Union, Germany, France, Canada and Australia, expressed support for the Philippines and concern over the incidents, Department of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Teresita Daza said.

Philippine officials said the Chinese coast guard’s high-pressure water cannon blasts disabled and damaged the engines of the Philippine supply boat M/L Kalayaan, which had to be towed back to a Philippine port. One of two Philippine coast guard escort ships, the BRP Cabra, sustained damage to its mast.

The Chinese coast guard said it had “implemented controls in accordance with laws and regulations.” The statement gave no details about the measures taken but said the Philippines action “seriously infringed on China’s sovereignty.”

“The responsibility lies entirely with the Philippine side,” the Chinese coast guard said.

The U.S. State Department said the actions by China’s ship “were dangerous and unlawful” and undermined regional stability. It renewed a vow that it would defend Philippine forces if they face an armed attack.

China has rejected all international condemnation and attempts at legal intervention, including a 2016 ruling by a U.N.-backed arbitration tribunal that invalidated China’s claims, leaving them without any legal basis. China says it has a legal right to “defend its sovereignty” in keeping with its expansive claim to the South China Sea.

On Saturday, the Chinese coast guard and accompanying ships also trained water cannons at three Philippine fisheries vessels, causing damage to one, to prevent them from approaching Scarborough Shoal. Officials said that Chinese vessels used a long-range acoustic device that could impair hearing, causing “severe temporary discomfort and incapacitation to some Filipino crew.”

In other high seas clashes this year, Philippines officials said that Chinese coast guard ships used a military-grade laser that caused Filipino crew members temporary blindness and engaged in dangerous blocking and shadowing maneuvers that caused minor collisions.

___​

Associated Press journalists Aaron Favila and Joeal Calupitan and Christopher Bodeen in Taipei, Taiwan contributed to this report.
 

rob0126

Veteran Member
Why dont we just let these 'leaders' fight it out in a room and leave the rest of us alone in the world.

They want to fight, let them put their money where there mouth is.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
If Xi is dumb enough to really start something with the Philippines any thoughts of going after Taiwan could get very befuddled.

All of this "wolf" activity could get real expensive real quick.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
These two articles round out the story as it stands right now. In short, the Vietnamese are still highly suspicious of their ancient enemy but the Taiwanese are a little divided.


China’s Xi meets with Vietnamese prime minister on second day of visit to shore up ties​


BY HUIZHONG WU
Updated 6:06 AM EST, December 13, 2023
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BANGKOK (AP) — Chinese leader Xi Jinping met with Vietnam’s prime minister and the head of the country’s National Assembly on Wednesday, on the second day of his visit to shore up Beijing’s relationship with Hanoi after the Southeast Asian nation recently elevated its ties with Japan and the United States.

Xi met with Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong on Tuesday, and they announced that China and Vietnam would work toward a “community with a shared future,” in what was seen as a diplomatic concession by Vietnam to Beijing. The two sides signed 36 agreements, mostly about “deepening cooperation,” ranging from telecommunications to cross-party exchange, according to Vietnamese media reports.

Vietnam has resisted using that phrase in the past but wanted to assuage Beijing’s concerns after Vietnam designated both the U.S. and Japan as “comprehensive strategic partners” in recent months — the highest official designation for a diplomatic relationship. Chinese state media says the designation was first given to China.

Xi referenced the phrase again Wednesday in a meeting with National Assembly Chairman Vuong Dinh Hue.

“In the next stage, both sides need to strengthen cooperation in various fields, including legislation, to contribute to the building of the community with a shared future,” Xi said.



Nguyen Khac Giang, a visiting fellow at ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, said the rhetorical concession from Hanoi “doesn’t mean Vietnam supports China-led political initiatives, but rather (is) a delicate act of hedging, particularly after its upgrade with the U.S. and Japan recently.”

“I think the move is expected given the fact that Xi came to Hanoi in person,” Nguyen said.

Xi also met with Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and President Vo Van Thuong on Wednesday and will end his trip after meeting with young Vietnamese and Chinese scholars.

Vietnam and China agreed to exchange prisoners, though there were few details made public on that agreement. The two also renewed the expired 2020 agreement to jointly patrol the Gulf of Tonkin which lies between China’s southern island province of Hainan and the northeastern coast of Vietnam, local media reported.

In addition, the two signed an agreement to cooperate on railway projects.

Vietnam and China already have robust ties, but they also have significant points of difference, primarily over territorial claims over islands in the South China Sea, a flashpoint in Asia that has put the U.S. and China on a collision course. China claims virtually the entire strategic waterway, but the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have also pressed their separate claims.

China has been Vietnam’s largest trading partner for several years, with a bilateral trade turnover of $175.6 billion in 2022. Imports from China, including crucial inputs for Vietnam’s manufacturing sector, make up 67%, according to Vietnam customs data cited by Vietnamese state media.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

A leader of Taiwan’s Nationalist Party visits China as the island’s presidential election looms​


CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
Updated 2:58 AM EST, December 14, 2023
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TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — A leader of Taiwan’s main opposition Nationalist Party is visiting rival China less than one month before the self-governing island republic holds elections for president and the legislature under intense pressure from Beijing.

In a news release Thursday, the party — also known as the Kuomintang or KMT — said vice chair Andrew Hsia and his delegation departed for China on Wednesday at the invitation of Taiwanese businesspeople. It called the trip a mission to maintain contacts and contribute to “peace, stability and prosperity between the two sides.”

Though the party said the invitation was accepted in October, the visit comes at a sensitive time as the Nationalists seek to regain the presidency and legislature from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, which has been shunned by China for its insistence that Taiwan is an independent country.

China claims Taiwan is part of its territory, to be brought under its control by military force if necessary. The Nationalists ruled Taiwan under martial law for almost four decades after fleeing to the island amid the Communist takeover of mainland China in 1949 and formally agree with Beijing that both sides are part of a single Chinese nation.

Most surveys show the party’s ticket of former national police chief Hou You-yi and his running mate, ex-legislator Jaw Shaw-kong, are well behind the DPP’s William Lai, currently vice president, and vice presidential candidate Bi-khim Hsiao, Taiwan’s former representative to the United States. That appears to reflect the prevailing sentiment among Taiwanese of maintaining their current status of de-facto independence, even while maintaining close economic ties with China.

On Wednesday, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office denounced Lai as a “troublemaker” and “war-maker.” Spokesperson Zhu Fenglian said Taiwanese should reject independence “for the sake of their peace, stability and well-being.”

In its statement, the Nationalist Party said it is committed to Taiwan’s security and democracy, and to peace and stability between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait. It accused the DPP of generating “fake news” concerning contacts between Nationalist officials and the ruling Chinese Communist Party, saying that was an attempt to smear a “normal and appropriate agenda to conduct exchanges on the mainland to serve Taiwan compatriots and Taiwan businesspeople.”

The statement said Taiwanese on the mainland needed particular care “at a time of heightened tensions between the U.S. and Beijing authorities,” and leaders must maintain channels of communication.

That appeared to cast Hsia in the role of go-between, although there was no indication he had been entrusted with carrying any specific messages to the Chinese authorities. The statement did not say whether Hsia would be meeting any high-ranking Chinese officials.

Contacts between Taiwan politicians and China have come under particular scrutiny in the run-up to the election amid concerns Beijing will seek to influence the vote by offering favors and spreading disinformation. Prosecutors have been looking into trips to China by grassroots ward chiefs during which their expenses were covered by the Chinese government, saying that is part of a long-term “united front” strategy of steering votes toward pro-unification politicians.

The Nationalists said Hsia was due to visit cities including Chengdu, Nanchang, Zhongshan, Xiamen, and Chongqing on what it termed a listening tour.

It’s at least his second trip to China in 2023; a visit in February included a meeting with the head of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, Song Tao.

Since President Tsai Ing-wen first took office in 2016, China has refused all contact with Taiwan’s government over her refusal to recognize the “One China” principle embodied in an earlier agreement brokered by the Nationalists and mainland Communists known as the “’92 Consensus.”

The vast majority of Taiwan’s 23 million people support the status quo of de-facto independence. Tsai, who is limited to two four-year terms, says there is no need to make a formal declaration that would likely spark a military response from China.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment

A leader of Taiwan’s Nationalist Party visits China as the island’s presidential election looms​


CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
Updated 2:58 AM EST, December 14, 2023
Share
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — A leader of Taiwan’s main opposition Nationalist Party is visiting rival China less than one month before the self-governing island republic holds elections for president and the legislature under intense pressure from Beijing.

In a news release Thursday, the party — also known as the Kuomintang or KMT — said vice chair Andrew Hsia and his delegation departed for China on Wednesday at the invitation of Taiwanese businesspeople. It called the trip a mission to maintain contacts and contribute to “peace, stability and prosperity between the two sides.”

Though the party said the invitation was accepted in October, the visit comes at a sensitive time as the Nationalists seek to regain the presidency and legislature from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party, which has been shunned by China for its insistence that Taiwan is an independent country.

China claims Taiwan is part of its territory, to be brought under its control by military force if necessary. The Nationalists ruled Taiwan under martial law for almost four decades after fleeing to the island amid the Communist takeover of mainland China in 1949 and formally agree with Beijing that both sides are part of a single Chinese nation.

Most surveys show the party’s ticket of former national police chief Hou You-yi and his running mate, ex-legislator Jaw Shaw-kong, are well behind the DPP’s William Lai, currently vice president, and vice presidential candidate Bi-khim Hsiao, Taiwan’s former representative to the United States. That appears to reflect the prevailing sentiment among Taiwanese of maintaining their current status of de-facto independence, even while maintaining close economic ties with China.

On Wednesday, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office denounced Lai as a “troublemaker” and “war-maker.” Spokesperson Zhu Fenglian said Taiwanese should reject independence “for the sake of their peace, stability and well-being.”

In its statement, the Nationalist Party said it is committed to Taiwan’s security and democracy, and to peace and stability between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait. It accused the DPP of generating “fake news” concerning contacts between Nationalist officials and the ruling Chinese Communist Party, saying that was an attempt to smear a “normal and appropriate agenda to conduct exchanges on the mainland to serve Taiwan compatriots and Taiwan businesspeople.”

The statement said Taiwanese on the mainland needed particular care “at a time of heightened tensions between the U.S. and Beijing authorities,” and leaders must maintain channels of communication.

That appeared to cast Hsia in the role of go-between, although there was no indication he had been entrusted with carrying any specific messages to the Chinese authorities. The statement did not say whether Hsia would be meeting any high-ranking Chinese officials.

Contacts between Taiwan politicians and China have come under particular scrutiny in the run-up to the election amid concerns Beijing will seek to influence the vote by offering favors and spreading disinformation. Prosecutors have been looking into trips to China by grassroots ward chiefs during which their expenses were covered by the Chinese government, saying that is part of a long-term “united front” strategy of steering votes toward pro-unification politicians.

The Nationalists said Hsia was due to visit cities including Chengdu, Nanchang, Zhongshan, Xiamen, and Chongqing on what it termed a listening tour.

It’s at least his second trip to China in 2023; a visit in February included a meeting with the head of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, Song Tao.

Since President Tsai Ing-wen first took office in 2016, China has refused all contact with Taiwan’s government over her refusal to recognize the “One China” principle embodied in an earlier agreement brokered by the Nationalists and mainland Communists known as the “’92 Consensus.”

The vast majority of Taiwan’s 23 million people support the status quo of de-facto independence. Tsai, who is limited to two four-year terms, says there is no need to make a formal declaration that would likely spark a military response from China.


Considering the history of the KMT I'd be more than a bit suspect regarding that trip.....
 

jward

passin' thru
Oops. this apparently didn't post earlier. If anyone is interested:

Background info on this issue, as well as others china's involved in can be found on this thread:
 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info

#Chinese vessels at Ayungin Shoal seen in ‘invasion’ mode Chinese ships staged a rare “invasion” of Ayungin or Second Thomas Shoal in the West Philippine Sea in a “calculated show of force by Beijing,” after disrupting a Philippine resupply mission in the same waters over the weekend, according to a maritime security expert. As many as 11 Chinese maritime militia vessels were observed in the Philippine-held shoal while dozens more clustered in the periphery on Monday, a day after the tension-filled supply run, said Ray Powell, SeaLight director at the Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation, citing satellite images by Planet Labs. “This highly unusual invasion of the shoal’s interior appears to have been a calculated show of force by Beijing,” he wrote in an analysis on the SeaLight website on Thursday.

“It’s quite rare to see PRC (People’s Republic of China) vessels enter the shoal’s interior at all, but 11 is certainly the highest number we’ve yet observed at SeaLight. In fact, it may be unprecedented,” he added. On Sunday, China Coast Guard (CCG) ships blasted water cannons at Philippine vessels and rammed one of them during the latter’s resupply mission to BRP Sierra Madre, a Navy warship deliberately run aground in Ayungin to serve as a Philippine outpost. Ayungin is a low-tide elevation within the Philippines’ 370-kilometer exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and continental shelf, one of the nine features occupied by the Philippines in the Kalayaan Island Group, or the Spratlys. During Sunday’s incident, one of the two supply boats, the ML Kalayaan, had to be towed back to port after sustaining significant damage from the high-intensity water cannon attack by the Chinese. 24-hour swarm It wasn’t the first time the Chinese had tried to obstruct the Filipinos’ regular rotation and resupply runs but its blockading force would typically return to nearby Panganiban (Mischief) Reef once the boats and their escorts departed the shoal, noted Powell.

“This weekend, however, the vessel swarm remained for an additional 24 hours (until Monday afternoon) and 11 pushed inside before returning to Mischief,” he said. Panganiban Reef, also located within the Philippines’ EEZ and which lies 37 km northwest of Ayungin, has been transformed by China into one of its largest military outposts in the Spratlys, with a 3-km airstrip, missile shelters, hangars and radar domes. “Imagery from Planet Labs taken at 0955 local time (0155 UTC) on Monday clearly shows the 11 vessels spread throughout the shoal,” Powell wrote. Two of these were rafted together near the northwest corner about 2 km south of the Sierra Madre. None of the ships inside the shoal could be detected through the automatic information system (AIS) signals, he said. Another fleet of 27 Chinese vessels, including China Coast Guard 5402 and 26 Qiong Sansha Yu militia ships, were detected on AIS surrounding the shoal, he added. More vessels were visible outside the shoal without corresponding AIS signals, so the total number is likely augmented by other AIS-dark militia and CCG ships, Powell said.

‘Always worrisome’ Philippine authorities believe CCG ships are being assisted by Chinese maritime militia vessels posing as fishing boats to harass Philippine ships in the West Philippine Sea. On Monday, the National Task Force on the West Philippine Sea (NTF-WPS) reported sighting 46 Chinese vessels—14 Chinese maritime militia in the vicinity and another 22 detected using AIS, eight CCG ships and two Chinese Navy vessels—“the largest number of maritime forces that we have documented so far in the previous months.” The task force said China’s dangerous maneuvers and water cannon attacks during resupply missions in Ayungin and Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal marked a “serious escalation.” Western Command chief Vice Adm. Alberto Carlos told the Inquirer that there were five Chinese militia vessels inside the shoal as of Thursday, located 3.7 km to 9.26 km (2 to 5 nautical miles) away from the Sierra Madre. The Chinese ships usually loiter outside the shoal. “The presence of foreign vessels loitering in our exclusive economic zone is always worrisome,“ he said, adding: “Based on our assessment, their presence inside the shoal is to closely monitor the BRP Sierra Madre.

We always observe them taking photos.” For now, Carlos said, the Philippines’ intention is to drive away the Chinese vessels in a “nonconfrontational” manner by deploying rubber boats. New approach In a separate interview, Carlos said the NTF-WPS was planning a different approach for its rotation and reprovision (Rore) mission in response to China’s growing aggression. “As far as the future Rore… there’s a new strategy so we are waiting for that to be approved by the President. If that is approved, we will see how we will come up with a new strategy or other approaches for the Rore, consistent with that new strategy,” he told the Inquirer on Wednesday. “But while it is not yet approved, we will continue with the same protocols, same procedures for our Rore,” he added. Defense Undersecretary Ignacio Madriaga told a House panel last week that the military had been trying “a different menu of responses to the Chinese in doing our Rore so that it will complicate matters for the Chinese and that will give us a greater chance of success.”

Since Sunday’s mission was only partly completed with one boat unable to make it to the Sierra Madre, supply runs are being planned for this month and January, according to Carlos. “We’re still evaluating the damage [to the supply vessels] and how fast we can put it back into operational status,” he said. Carlos surmised that the Chinese were especially determined to disrupt last weekend’s mission to prevent the civilian-led “Atin Ito (This is Ours)” coalition that was delivering Christmas gifts and provisions to troops and island settlers in the West Philippine Sea. The convoy’s mother ship Kapitan Felix Oca was forced to turn back after Chinese vessels shadowed it, but a smaller boat managed to slip past them and unloaded the supplies on Lawak (Nanshan) Island.
 
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