BEIJING (AP) — The United
States said its two B-52 bombers had no intention of flying over a
Chinese-controlled man-made island in the South China Sea, after
Beijing accused Washington of "a serious military provocation"
in the strategic waters with overlapping claims.
China's Defense Ministry on
Saturday accused the U.S. of deliberately raising tensions in the
region, where China has been aggressively asserting its claims to
virtually all islands, reefs and their surrounding seas. It
reiterated that it would do whatever is necessary to protect China's
sovereignty.
Pentagon spokesman Mark Wright
said that the Dec. 10 mission was not a "freedom of navigation"
operation and that there was "no intention of flying within 12
nautical miles of any feature," indicating the mission may have
strayed off course.
The U.S. uses pre-planned freedom
of navigation operations to assert its rights to "innocent
passage" in other country's territorial waters.
"The United States routinely
conducts B-52 training missions throughout the region, including over
the South China Sea," Wright said in an email to The Associated
Press. "These missions are designed to maintain readiness and
demonstrate our commitment to fly, sail and operate anywhere allowed
under international law."
Wright said the U.S. was "looking
into the matter."
The U.S. takes no official stance
on sovereignty claims in the South China Sea, through which $5
trillion in international trade passes each year. However, Washington
insists on freedom of navigation and maintains that China's seven
newly created islands do not enjoy traditional rights, including a
12-nautical-mile (22-kilometer) territorial limit.
China's Defense Ministry demanded
that Washington immediately take measures to prevent such incidents
and damage to relations between the two nations' militaries.
"The actions by the U.S.
side constitute a serious military provocation and are rendering more
complex and even militarizing conditions in the South China Sea,"
the ministry said in a statement.
The statement said that Chinese
military personnel on the island went on high alert during the
overflights by the B-52 strategic bombers and that they issued
warnings demanding the aircraft leave the area.
As is China's usual practice, the
Foreign Ministry took a more diplomatic tone, saying the situation
was stable.
Speaking to reporters on a visit
to Berlin, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi drew a contrast between
the situation in the South China Sea region and the chaos and turmoil
in other parts of the world. "The situation in the South China
Sea is essentially stable overall," he said.
Wang also said that while China
understands the concerns of nations from outside the region — a
clear reference to the U.S. — they should "do more to benefit
peace and stability and support efforts to find a resolution through
talks, and not manufacture tensions or even fan the flames."
"We don't think this is a
constructive approach and will not receive the support and welcome of
relevant nations," Wang said.
The Foreign Ministry said it had
"lodged solemn representation with the United States" over
the incident.
China's latest protest comes
amid a simmering dispute over Washington's approval this past week of
the first arms package in four years offered to Taiwan, Beijing's
self-governing rival. Beijing, which regards Taiwan as part of its
territory, demanded the deal be scrapped to avoid harming relations
across the Taiwan Strait and between China and the U.S.
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