Top US Navy admiral to visit China to discuss South China Sea

PUBLISHED : Friday, 15 July, 2016, 3:18pm, scmp.com

The US Navy’s top admiral is making a three-day visit to China and meeting his Chinese counterpart at a time when Beijing has rejected an international tribunal’s ruling that invalidated its expansive claims in the South China Sea.

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Admiral John Richardson, chief of naval operations, will meet the commander of the People’s Liberation Army’s Navy, Admiral Wu Shengli, during his trip to the Chinese capital of Beijing and the port city of Qingdao, starting on Sunday.

China’s Navy Commander Admiral Wu Shengli (centre) will hold talks with Admiral John Richardson. Photo: AFP

Richardson is scheduled to visit the Chinese navy’s headquarters in Beijing and meet other senior defence officials.

He will visit the navy’s submarine academy and tour the aircraft carrier, Liaoning, when he is in its home port of Qingdao.

The two admirals will discuss the South China Sea, ongoing Rim of the Pacific, or RIMPAC, military drills, and ways to boost interactions between the two militaries.

Richardson’s visit comes as China has warned other countries against threatening its security in the South China Sea after a five-member tribunal in The Hague ruled that China had no legal basis for its claim to most of the South China Sea.

Beijing has responded to the ruling by asserting that the islands in the South China Sea are “China’s inherent territory”.

Vice-Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin said on Wednesday that Beijing could declare an air defence identification zone over the waters if it felt threatened.

China’s island development in the South China Sea has inflamed regional tensions, including with nations that have competing claims to the land formations.

International tribunal’s South China Sea ruling against Beijing ‘complicates situation’ and could lead to political crisis: Tung Chee-hwa

Most fear that Beijing, which has built airfields and placed weapons systems on the man-made islands, will use the construction to extend its military reach and perhaps try to restrict navigation.

Several times in the past year, US warships have deliberately sailed close to one of those islands to exercise freedom of navigation and challenge the claims.

In response, China has deployed fighter jets and ships to track and warn off the American ships, and accused the US of provocative action.

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