Over the past six years, unilateral and escalatory
actions by claimants to territories in the South China Sea have exacerbated
tensions in the region.
China has not been the precipitator of the tensions in these waters —
whether it be in initiating resource exploration activities in disputed areas,
introducing military vessels to enforce jurisdictional claims, or conducting land reclamation work in the adjoining waters. In each
instance, other claimants were the first to roil the waters.
But China’s response to actions by other claimants has been
heavy-handed, disproportionate to the provocation at hand and, at times,
designed to destabilise an already-delicate situation. That said, none of the
actions by claimants, China included, has violated international law — even if
some of the actions have operated in grey areas where definitive rules are
lacking (such as in respect of the status of maritime historic rights). The same cannot be said about
recently-publicised actions by the US Navy in these contested waters.
On 20 May, a US Navy P-8 Poseidon surveillance aircraft directly flew over a Chinese administered artificial island
constructed atop a Spratly’s feature (the Fiery Cross Reef) in the South China
Sea. The American crew insisting that it was flying through international
airspace. The overflight was provocative, dangerous and inconsistent with
international law. Worse, the most senior US diplomat for the East and
Southeast Asia region appears not to grasp this, insisting that the flight was ‘entirely appropriate’.
International law on artificial islands, installations and structures is
very clear. The UN Convention
on the Law of the Sea reads: ‘In the exclusive economic zone, the
coastal state shall have the exclusive right to construct artificial islands,
installations and structures; the coastal state shall have exclusive
jurisdiction over such islands; [it] may, where necessary, establish reasonable
safety zones around such islands … [so long as these zones do] not exceed 500
metres around them, measured from each point of their outer edge; [all vessels]
must respect these safety zones’.
China is legally entitled to reclaim and construct artificial islands
and installations in the sea areas adjacent to the land features that it
administers within the Spratlys chain. There is no rule in international law
that bars a coastal state from undertaking this kind of reclamation at sea.
And, so long as the feature resides within the 200-nautical-mile
exclusive economic zone (or median line thereof) of an ‘island’ administered by
China in the Spratlys, Beijing is entitled to reclaim and build atop that land
feature — even if it is submerged at high-tide. Three of Beijing’s seven
administered features in the Spratlys protrude above sea level at high-tide and
could comport to the technical definition of an ‘island’. If Itu Aba/Taiping
Island — an ‘island’ that is administered by Taiwan — is considered to be
Chinese territory as per the ‘One China’ policy, then every China-administered
feature in the Spratlys chain is encompassed within this exclusive economic
zone area up to the median line.
China also has the right to exercise exclusive jurisdiction over the
waters and airspace above the artificial island, out to perimeter of 500 metres
from its outer edges. Establishing such a safety zone has nothing to do with
unilateral enforcement of a military exclusion zone or an air defence
identification zone (ADIZ) as some have claimed.
It follows that the US Navy by directly flying over the artificial
island has violated Beijing’s rights. Admittedly, the US is not a party to the
Law of the Sea Treaty and hence is not bound by its strictures. By the same
token, the US’ customary navigation and overflight freedoms do not override the
prescriptive treaty-based rights that accrue to Beijing in the airspace and
adjoining waters of its artificial islands, installations and structures.
The flights are not just legally untenable and dangerously escalatory;
they also have implications beyond the immediate legal infringement.
Specifically, they are also a standing invitation to the Chinese to send
surveillance flights through the airspace directly above the disputed
Senkaku/Diaoyu islands. In November 2013, Beijing declared an ADIZ in the East China Sea, which
controversially included the airspace over these disputed islands. China has
until now refrained from conducting non-commercial flights through this
airspace. But it would be within its rights as a claimant to take such
provocative and unwise action. It is extremely unwise for Washington to lay the
groundwork for such behaviour through its own errant actions in the South China
Sea. To rein in its Spratlys overflights would be the sensible course.
The driver of America’s actions in the Spratlys is a growing and
pervasive mind-set within the Beltway that insists that the US must ‘do
something … anything’ to demonstrate active resolve in the face of regional
anxiety over China’s use of military and paramilitary force to allegedly
change the status quo.
If that is indeed a sensible strategic objective, US (and other
claimants’) naval vessels and aircraft could operationally assert their
navigational and overflight freedoms beyond the 500-metre safety zone of
China’s artificial islands that are built atop low-tide elevations. Such
features are not entitled to a territorial sea. Common sense would dictate that
as a precaution the overflights should be kept some distance away from the
500-metre zone.
But no party in the South China Sea should engage in non-commercial
passage through the airspace above an artificial island, installation or
structures that they do not administer or are obliged to protect. For the
United States to do so would be to violate international law; for other
claimants to do so would be to engage in dangerously provocative actions.
High seas navigational and overflight freedoms in the waters adjoining
the disputed land features in the South China Sea have not been violated,
despite a rhetorical tendency to inflate the threat to these freedoms. The
exercise of these freedoms, especially by non-claimants, should not interfere
with the sovereign rights and jurisdiction of those who are claimant parties in
these waters.
Sourabh Gupta is a Senior
Research Associate at Samuels International Associates, Inc., Washington, D.C.
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