The U.S. State Department's number two diplomat on
Friday compared China's behavior in pursuit of territory in the South China Sea
to that of Russia in eastern Ukraine.
Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken called
China's large scale reclamation projects in the South China Sea, "a threat
to peace and stability."
He said the United States took no position on the
merits of competing claims in the disputed sea, but had a strong interest in
how those were pursued, and in preserving freedom of navigation.
"The way forward is for China, and all claimants,
to freeze their reclamation activities and resolve their difference in
accordance the rule of law," he said.
"In both eastern Ukraine and the South China Sea,
we’re witnessing efforts to unilaterally and coercively change the status quo —
transgressions that the United States and our allies stand united
against," Blinken said in a speech at the Center for a New American Security
think tank.
China claims nearly all of the South China Sea and
says it has every right to build up reefs there. Its top diplomat State
Councilor Yang Jiechi said after talks with the United States this week that
freedom of navigation in the Sea, through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade
passes every year, was guaranteed.
The comments come at a time of rising tensions between
the United States and China over the latter's increasingly assertive behavior
in Asia and massive cyber attacks on U.S. government computers.
On Thursday, U.S. intelligence chief James Clapper
said on China was the top suspect in the hacking attacks on the Office of
Personnel Management, which compromised the data of millions of Americans.
It was the first time the Obama administration has
publicly accused Beijing of the hacking, but Clapper said the attacks were
still under investigation. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang called
this "absurd logic."
In April last year, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
for East Asia Daniel Russel said the prospect of economic retaliation should
discourage Beijing from using force to pursue territorial claims in Asia in the
way Russia had in Crimea. He also said China should not doubt the U.S.
commitment to defend its Asian allies.
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