US Senator John McCain on Monday called for expanded US military and political support to Southeast Asian nations to stand up against China in the increasingly volatile South China Sea.
McCain, a senior member of the Republican Party, said the US should help members of ASEAN to develop and deploy an early warning system and coastal vessels in contested waters.
The former navy captain said the US should also turn to diplomacy to help ASEAN members sort out their own disputes and “establish a more unified front,” hailing a recent agreement between Malaysia and Brunei as an example.
“China seeks to exploit the divisions among ASEAN members to play them off each other to press its own agenda,” McCain told a conference at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.
McCain, who favors an assertive military policy who lost the 2008 US presidential race to US President Barack Obama, welcomed the administration’s defense of freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, but said it should go further.
He said it should let “other countries know, where possible, which claims the United States accepts, which ones we do not, and what actions we are prepared to support,” especially in defense of the Philippines, a treaty ally.
Tensions have been rising in the potentially resource-rich South China Sea and East China Sea, where Beijing has myriad territorial disputes.
In recent weeks, Vietnam has carried out live-fire naval drills and the Philippines has announced plans to send its naval flagship in contested waters after incidents at sea.
Washington and Hanoi, which have growing ties, last week jointly called for a peaceful resolution to disputes in the South China Sea. However, the US as a general rule does not take positions on territorial disputes to which it is not party.
McCain said he welcomed a cooperative relationship with China and did not seek conflict, but laid the blame squarely on China’s “aggressive behavior” and “unsubstantiated territorial claims” for recent tensions.
McCain, who has voiced alarm at what he sees as isolationism within his party, said the US had an interest in working to prevent any nation from using “persistent bullying” to impose itself on the South China Sea.
Speaking at the Washington conference, Su Hao (蘇浩), an academic at China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing, insisted his country was not becoming more assertive.
“For China, we prefer peace and stability rather than conflict,” Su said.
He questioned why tensions had risen rather than calmed down in the nearly one year since US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton issued a call for freedom of navigation in the South China Sea.
Su said the Chinese feel “scared sometimes or feel some kind of uncertainty to make us try to say something to support our claims in the South China Sea.”
“The reason why China looks a little bit assertive is because there is some sort of reaction to some things happening against China,” he said.
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