South China Sea Disputes: Conflict in a Global Crossroads

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In the Western Pacific, the South China Sea is a global crossroads that holds strategic importance for many nations world wide. The South China Sea stretches from the Taiwan and Luzon Straits in the north to Indonesia and the Strait of Malacca in the south with Vietnam on the west and the Philippines and Borneo on the east. In total size, the South China Sea surpasses the Mediterranean Sea. However, unlike this Near-Eastern comparator, territorial disputes and conflicting claims threaten the movement of global trade through the South China Sea, thus unbalancing regional stability in the Asia-Pacific. Claimants include the bordering coastal countries of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the Republic of China (a.k.a. Taiwan), the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia and Vietnam. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton addressed the United States position regarding these territorial claims. In her statement on the South China Sea, Secretary of State Clinton reaffirmed the fact that the U.S. does not “take a position on the competing territorial claims over land features in the South China Sea.”1 She goes on to state that “all parties should pursue their territorial claims and accompanying rights to maritime space in accordance with international law.”2 Consequently, the U.S. must maintain an active strategic interest in the peaceful resolution of South China Sea claimant disputes to ensure continued freedom of navigation throughout the region. This paper will provide a perspective on the geo-political and strategic issues, the conflicting claims, potential resolutions and the current U.S. position.

The South China Sea holds geo-political, economic and strategic importance due to several key factors including vital sea li...

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...th China Sea disputes: ASEAN and China,” East Asia Forum, July 14, 2011, http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2011/07/14/south-china-sea-disputes-asean-and-china/ (accessed January 30, 2012).26 U.S. Energy Information Administration, Country Analysis Briefs: South China Sea Region (Washington, DC: Energy Information Administration, 2008) http://www.eia.gov/countries/regions-topics.cfm?fips=SCS (accessed January 27, 2012).27 Xinhua, “China promotes ‘South China Sea Code of Conduct’,” Xinhuanet, November 22, 2011, http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/video/2011-11/22/c_131261756.htm (accessed February 11, 2012).28 U.S. Department of State, Clinton Statement on South China Sea, by Hillary Rodham Clinton, Washington, DC: Department of State, July 22, 2011.29 Various pro- and anti-ratification arguments exist, but do not provide further relevant detail to this paper’s thesis.

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