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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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, March 29, 2017
China: Military infrastructure in Spratly’s can deploy warplanes

Construction
is shown on Subi Reef, in the Spratly Islands, the disputed South China
Sea in this March 14, 2017 satellite image released by CSIS Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) to Reuters on March 27, 2017. Source:
CSIS/AMTI DigitalGlobe/Handout via Reuters
CHINA appears to have largely completed major construction of military infrastructure on artificial islands it has built in the South China Sea and can now deploy combat planes and other military hardware there at any time, a US think tank said on Monday.
The Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI), part of Washington’s
Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the work on Fiery
Cross, Subi and Mischief Reefs in the Spratly Islands included naval,
air, radar and defensive facilities.
The think tank cited satellite images taken this month, which its
director, Greg Poling, said showed new radar antennas on Fiery Cross and
Subi.
“So look for deployments in the near future,” he said.
China has denied US charges that it is militarizing the South China Sea,
although last week Premier Li Keqiang said defense equipment had been
placed on islands in the disputed waterway to maintain “freedom of
navigation.”

Construction is shown on Fiery Cross Reef, in the Spratly Islands, the
disputed South China Sea in this March 9, 2017 satellite image released
by CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) to Reuters on March 27, 2017.
Source: CSIS/AMTI DigitalGlobe/Handout via Reuters
A Pentagon spokesman, Commander Gary Ross, declined to comment on the
specifics of the AMTI report, saying it was not the Defense Department’s
practice to comment on intelligence.
But he said that “China‘s continued construction in the South China Sea
is part of a growing body of evidence that they continue to take
unilateral actions which are increasing tensions in the region and are
counterproductive to the peaceful resolution of disputes.”
AMTI said China‘s
three air bases in the Spratlys and another on Woody Island in the
Paracel chain further north would allow its military aircraft to operate
over nearly the entire South ChinaSea, a key global trade route that Beijing claims most of.
Several neighboring states have competing claims in the sea, which is widely seen as a potential regional flashpoint.
The think tank said advanced surveillance and early-warning radar
facilities at Fiery Cross, Subi and Cuarteron Reefs, as well as Woody
Island, and smaller facilities elsewhere gave it similar radar coverage.
It said China had
installed HQ-9 surface-to-air missiles at Woody Island more than a year
ago and had deployed anti-ship cruise missiles there on at least one
occasion.
It had also constructed hardened shelters with retractable roofs for
mobile missile launchers at Fiery Cross, Subi and Mischief and enough
hangars at Fiery Cross for 24 combat aircraft and three larger planes,
including bombers.
US officials told Reuters last month that China had
finished building almost two dozen structures on Subi, Mischief and
Fiery Cross that appeared designed to house long-range surface-to-air
missiles.
In his Senate confirmation hearing in January, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson angered China by saying it should be denied access to islands it had built up in the South China Sea.
Tillerson subsequently softened his language, saying that in the event
of an unspecified “contingency,” the United States and its allies “must
be capable of limiting China‘s access to and use of” those islands to pose a threat.
In recent years, the United States has conducted a series of what it calls freedom-of-navigation operations in the South China Sea, raising tensions with Beijing. – Reuters
