A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, May 31, 2015
China, U.S. tone down rhetoric but far from S. China Sea solution
SINGAPORE | BY RAJU GOPALAKRISHNAN AND RACHEL ARMSTRONG
Sun May 31, 2015
After a months-long row over Beijing's island-building in the South
China Sea, the United States and China were relatively restrained at
Asia's top security forum this weekend, but no closer to any solution.
U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter told the Shangri-La Dialogue in
Singapore that China was threatening security in the region with its
maritime construction work, but acknowledged other claimant countries to
the disputed sea were also at fault.
"There's no progress in the South China Sea (dispute), but the
atmosphere has calmed a bit, thanks to reasonable consideration by all
parties," said Major General Jin Yinan of China's National Defense
University, a delegate at the conference. "The U.S. has adjusted its
stance a little."
Admiral Sun Jianguo, a deputy chief of staff of the People's Liberation
Army who headed the Chinese delegation, refrained from singling out the
United States for criticism in his address and emphasized China's
commitment to peaceful relations.
"China has always kept in mind the larger interests of maritime
security," Sun said, reiterating that his country's "indisputable"
claims over the waters were based on legal and historical evidence.
Nevertheless, Washington is under huge pressure to respond forcefully to
the Chinese land reclamation, with Republican Senator John McCain, one
of the participants at the dialogue, suggesting that U.S. ships and
aircraft ignore the 12-nautical mile zone around the artificial islands.
"If we respected a 12-mile zone, then we would be making a mistake of
enormous proportions because that would be de facto recognition of
Chinese sovereignty," said McCain, the chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee.
If U.S. vessels enter the zone, tensions would escalate sharply and
there is no saying how Chinese forces based there would respond.
"If you look at the rhetoric, they are going to fight back," said Jia
Qingguo, Dean of the School of International Studies at Peking
University. "If you look at their interests, they may opt for rhetoric
instead of action. But here the danger is of an accident-led conflict."
Admiral Harry Harris, newly appointed chief of the U.S. Pacific Command,
told reporters his forces would continue to operate in the region
"without limitation and in accordance with international law."
But he also said he wanted increased military-to-military ties with
China, including the U.S.-led Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) joint naval
exercises in 2016.
McCain and other critics of the administration have said China should be
barred from RIMPAC to show U.S. disapproval of its actions.
AIR DEFENSE ZONE PROSPECTS
China also signalled it was not considering declaring an Air Defense
Identification Zone (ADIZ), which requires overflying aircraft to
identify themselves, around the disputed islands anytime soon.
Such a move, which some U.S. military experts have seen as increasingly likely, would be viewed as provocative by Washington.
Sun said a decision on an ADIZ would be taken after an assessment of the
security situation and taking "extensive factors" into consideration.
Jin, the major general, told Reuters Beijing was not planning such a
move, although he added: "It's not a permanent promise, it's just China
is not considering it at the moment."
Other countries participating in the dialogue warned the row could spiral out of control and called for responsible action.
Washington wants more Asian countries, including those from the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), to be more assertive
against what it sees as Chinese expansionism.
But even Vietnam, which claims islands in the area where China is doing
the reclamation work, said the major powers should have good relations
with each other, otherwise smaller nations would suffer.
"No country in the region wants to choose between China and the United
States," said Bonnie Glaser, a senior adviser at the Washington-based
Center for Strategic and International Studies.
"If the United States is too tough on China, then we run the risk of losing some of the members, especially ASEAN."
(Additional reporting by David Alexander, Rujun Shen, Saeed Azhar,
Masayuki Kitano Nobuhiro Kubo and Siva Govindasamy; Editing by Mike
Collett-White)