Lieutenant General Qi Jianguo, deputy chief of the general staff of the
People's Liberation Army, defended the patrols as legitimate and said
his country's sovereignty over the areas could not be disputed.
"Why are Chinese warships patrolling in East China Sea and South China
Sea? I think we are all clear about this," Qi told the annual Shangri-La
Dialogue security conference in Singapore.
"Our attitude on East China Sea and South China Sea is that they are in
our Chinese sovereignty. We are very clear about that," he said through
an interpreter.
"So the Chinese warships and the patrolling activities are totally legitimate and uncontroversial."
Qi was responding to a question from a delegate after giving a speech in
which he sought to assure neighbouring countries that China has no
hegemonic ambitions.
"China has never taken foreign expansion and military conquering as a state policy," he said.
One delegate however said there appeared to be growing regional
scepticism over China's peaceful intentions because it was inconsistent
with moves to send naval patrols to waters where other countries also
have claims.
China is locked in a territorial dispute with Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam in the South China Sea.
The four states have partial claims to islands but China says it has
sovereign rights to nearly all of the sea, including areas much closer
to other countries and thousands of kilometres from the Chinese coast.
China also has a dispute with Japan over the Senkaku islands, which Beijing calls the Diaoyus, in the East China Sea.
"I do hope the statements of the good general today will be translated
into action," Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin told
reporters.
He said Qi's remarks about China having no hegemonic ambitions were "far from what is happening" in the sea.
Manila last month protested at what it called the "provocative and
illegal presence" of a Chinese warship near Second Thomas Shoal, which
is occupied by Philippine troops.
Among the other moves that have caused alarm were China's occupation of a
shoal near the Philippines' main island last year, and the deployment
in March of Chinese naval ships to within 80 kilometres (50 miles) of
Malaysia's coast.
Competing claims have for decades made the area -- home to rich fishing
grounds and vital global shipping lanes and believed to sit atop vast
natural gas deposits -- one of Asia's potential military flashpoints.
China and Vietnam fought in 1974 and 1988 for control of islands in battles that left dozens of soldiers dead.
The US-China strategic rivalry also loomed large during the conference,
with US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on Saturday accusing Beijing of
waging cyber espionage against the United States.
But General Qi on Sunday allayed concerns that China had dropped a
pledge not to be the first to use nuclear weapons in a conflict.
Omission of the "no-first-use" pledge in a recent defence white paper
had created ripples in military circles and sparked speculation that
China may have abandoned the policy.
Qi also distanced his government from claims by some Chinese scholars
that the Ryukyu Islands, which include Okinawa, do not belong to Japan.
"This is only an article of particular scholars and their views on these
issues... it does not represent the views of the Chinese government,"
he said.
Maritime disputes and the risks of conflicts that could hurt Asia's
economic growth were a running theme during the three-day conference
that ended Sunday.
"Asia holds great promise for ourselves and the world but continued
peace and prosperity in this region are neither fait accompli nor
automatic," Singapore Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen told the conference.
"Instead, if we are to continue to enjoy stability and progress, we must
work effectively in unison to strengthen areas of common interests."
The Philippines' Gazmin defended Manila's move unilaterally to bring its
territorial dispute with China before a UN tribunal after China refused
to take part.
"We hope that the arbitration tribunal will issue a clarification in
accordance with international law that will direct China to respect our
sovereign rights," Gazmin told the forum.
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