HomeForexChina likely poised for island-building at Scarborough Shoal, analysts say

China likely poised for island-building at Scarborough Shoal, analysts say

A LANDSAT 7 image of Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. — WIKIPEDIA

By Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio, Reporter

CHINA MAY be preparing for island-building at Scarborough Shoal in the disputed South China Sea, in a move that could bolster its sweeping claims over the waterway and heighten regional tensions, analysts said over the weekend.

The Philippines should prepare its diplomatic and military toolkit to push back against possible land reclamation at the shoal, which could reshape the strategic balance in the contested waters, they added.

“A militarized outpost at Scarborough Shoal would present a severe security setback for the Philippines,” defense economist Rocio Salle Gatdula said in a Facebook Messenger chat, adding that it would place key military bases within striking range of Chinese missiles.

She added that it would allow China to “further surveil and potentially prohibit Philippine and US forces from operating in the Luzon Strait,” a key waterway between Manila and Taiwan, which China claims as its breakaway province.

Scarborough, named Panatag by Manila and called Huangyan Dao by China, has been at the center of renewed tensions between the countries that lay competing claims over features in the South China Sea, where trillions of dollars worth of trade passes through annually.

The shoal is a vast fishing lagoon that lies within the Philippines’ 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone and was seized by China in 2012 following a standoff with Philippine forces.

Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto C. Teodoro, Jr. last week said Manila is not ruling out possible Chinese island-building activity at Scarborough Shoal after Beijing’s nature reserve plan.

In September, China approved the creation of a 3,500-hectare reserve at the northeast rim of the shoal, which it said is intended to preserve the ecological diversity of one of the most contested areas in the strategic waterway.

“By declaring only the northeast side of Scarborough Shoal a ‘nature reserve,’ China has left itself the option of building on the other parts of the feature,” Raymond M. Powell, director of SeaLight, a maritime transparency group focused on the South China Sea, said in a Messenger chat.

Ms. Gatdula said Beijing’s reserve plan could be used as a cover for land reclamation, adding that there are “multiple indicators” suggesting that China is seeking to build an artificial island at Scarborough, like floating barriers and buoys within the feature.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment.

“This is reminiscent of what China had done at Mischief Reef and Fiery Cross Reef,” she said.

China has built man-made islands on numerous submerged features in the strategic waterway despite protests from neighboring countries, outfitting them with runways, hangars, radar systems and ports that could bolster its naval presence in the resource-rich waters.

Allowing China to build and militarize an artificial island at Scarborough Shoal could heighten regional instability and increase the risk of conflict between Beijing, Manila and its treaty ally Washington, Ms. Gatdula said.

“The result is an expansion of China’s de facto control over international waters and airspace,” she said. “This militarization fosters an environment of instability and raises the risk of inadvertent escalation between China, its neighboring countries and US allies.”

Artificial islands have become a key asset for China to project greater power in the South China Sea, said Mr. Powell. “[They have] proven to be effective power projection platforms from which to stage its paramilitary forces… deep into its neighbors’ waters.”

Chinese forces have built about 3,200 acres of new land in the heavily contested Spratly Islands since 2013, according to the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative.

“Additionally, the deployment of bombers and warships near the shoal further shows strategic preconditioning for a permanent military facility intended to close the gap in China’s South China Sea defense triangle of the Paracels and Spratly Islands,” Ms. Gatdula said.

Two Chinese long-range bombers flew east of Scarborough in March, Reuters reported.

Beijing’s declaration of a reserve at the disputed shoal calls for a “full court press” from Philippine authorities, said Sherwin E. Ona, a security analyst and associate professor at De La Salle University. He sought a combined response of legal challenges and intensified joint maritime patrols in the contested waters.

“We need to be ready for escalation,” he said in a Viber message. “The Philippines needs to be ready for any eventuality.”

The Philippine government should strike a balance of “diplomatic-military-political responses” while accelerating its military modernization program, which includes the acquisition of warships and advanced fighter aircraft, he added.

The South China Sea has become a regional flashpoint as Beijing asserts sovereignty over almost the entire waterway, defying a 2016 ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague that voided its sweeping claims.

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