Off the wire
1st Ld-Writethru-China Focus: High-speed loop line starts operation in south China  • China hails end of Ebola outbreak in Guinea  • Singapore appoints Independent Advisory Panel to optimize metro operation  • Indian stocks close lower  • China's railway construction robust despite investment slowdown  • Yearender: Top Ten world news events in 2015 selected by Xinhua  • Indonesia expects 12 mln foreign tourist arrivals in 2016  • 1st Ld-Writethru: Chinese shares close slightly higher Wednesday  • Yearender: China's railway diplomacy unlocks enormous cooperation potential  • IMF raises alarm over Djibouti's public debt, budgetary deficit  
You are here:   Home

China's recent moves in South China Sea make sense: U.S. scholar

Xinhua, December 30, 2015 Adjust font size:

China's recent moves to defend its sovereign territories in the South China Sea make sense, a U.S. scholar has noted.

China has described the issue in the Nansha Islands as a "core interest" because it involves sovereign territory, and it "is only a statement of the obvious," said Greg Austin, a professorial fellow with the EastWest Institute in New York.

"Any assumption that China has somehow expanded its maritime claims because it now feels more powerful is not borne out by the facts," Austin said in an article published recently on the website of The National Interest, an American bi-monthly international affairs magazine.

"One of many things that have changed about the disputes is China's willingness to act robustly, as most states would, to defend pre-existing sovereignty claims that have been in place ...," said Austin, who is also a visiting professor at the University of New South Wales Canberra.

"China's primary motivation in recent South China Sea military activities, then, is to defend what it sees as its island territories which neighboring countries have attempted to usurp," the scholar said in the article entitled "Why Beijing's South China Sea Moves Make Sense Now. Endi