WASHINGTON China appears to be building a third
airstrip in contested territory in the South China Sea, a U.S. expert said on
Monday, citing satellite photographs taken last week.
The photographs taken for Washington's
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) think tank on Sept. 8
show construction on Mischief Reef, one of several artificial islands China has
created in the Spratly archipelago.
The images show a
rectangular area with a retaining wall, 3,000 meters (3,280 yards) long,
matching similar work by China on two other reefs, Subi and Fiery Cross, said
Greg Poling, director of CSIS's Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI).
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"Clearly, what
we have seen is going to be a 3,000-meter airstrip and we have seen some more
work on what is clearly going to be some port facilities for ships," he
said.
Security experts say
the strip would be long enough to accommodate most Chinese military aircraft,
giving Beijing greater reach into the heart of maritime Southeast Asia, where
it has competing claims with several countries.
News of the work
comes ahead of a visit to Washington next week by Chinese President Xi Jinping.
U.S. worries about China's increasingly assertive territorial claims are
expected to be high on the agenda.
A spokeswoman for the
U.S. State Department did not comment specifically on the airstrip
construction, but repeated calls for a halt to land reclamation, construction and
militarization of outposts in the South China Sea to "ease tensions and
create space for diplomatic solutions."
A new airstrip at
Mischief Reef would be particularly worrying for the Philippines, a rival
claimant in the South China Sea. It would allow China to mount "more or
less constant" patrols over Reed Bank, where the Philippines has long
explored for oil and gas, Poling said.
Three airstrips, once
completed, would allow China to threaten all air traffic over the features it
has reclaimed in the South China Sea, he said, adding that it would be
especially worrying if China were to install advanced air defenses.
Satellite photographs
from late June showed China
had almost finished
a 3,000-meter airstrip on Fiery Cross.
Satellite images
from earlier this year showed reclamation work on Subi Reef creating land that
could accommodate another airstrip. Poling said the latest images made it
obvious that such an airstrip was being built at Subi.
China stepped up
creation of artificial islands in the South China Sea last year, drawing strong
criticism from Washington.
Asked about Mischief Reef on Monday, China's Foreign
Ministry spokesman Hong Lei repeated China's claim to "indisputable
sovereignty" over the Spratly Islands and its right to establish military
facilities there. WASHINGTON | (Additional
reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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