Off the wire
Spotlight: Hurdles remain despite Cuba's removal from U.S. terror list  • Thai human trafficking boat owner detained in Myanmar  • 4 WeChat scammers arrested in east China  • Chinese ambassador warns U.S. against escalating situation in S. China Sea  • News Analysis: Ukraine's moratorium on foreign debt payments raises default fears  • Fireman killed in south China  • Interview: ECLAC backs LatAm-China "community of common destiny": UN official  • China Exclusive: China plans to launch dark matter probe  • Interview: Brazilian trade mission to visit China to promote beef exports  • Xi congratulates Poland's president-elect Duba  
You are here:   Home

China dismisses U.S. views on South China Sea as incomplete, lack of jurisprudential evidence

Xinhua, May 30, 2015 Adjust font size:

China on Saturday dismissed here U. S. views on the South China Sea as incomplete and lack of jurisprudential evidence.

The dismissal came after U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said in his keynote speech to the ongoing Shangri-La dialogue that his country would continue to fly, sail, and operate in the region wherever international law allows.

Carter also called for "an immediate and lasting halt to land reclamation by all claimants" in the South China Sea.

In response, Rear Admiral Guan Youfei, director of Foreign Affairs Office of China's National Defense Ministry, said "Freedom of navigation should be for the benefits of economic development, rather than sending military aircraft and vessels everywhere" .

China has been exercising restraint on the South China Sea issue and the United States should treat the South China Sea issue with a more objective way, Guan added.

Organized by the London-based think tank International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), the Shangri-La Dialogue brings together defense chiefs from 26 nations here as well as security experts to exchange views on key issues that shape the defense and security landscape of the region. Endi