History and Overview of SCSD
History and Overview of SCSD
History and Overview of SCSD
The South China Sea disputes involve both island and maritime claims among
several sovereign states within the region, namely Brunei, the People's Republic
of China (PRC), Republic of China (ROC/Taiwan), Malaysia, Indonesia,
the Philippines, and Vietnam. An estimated US$3,37 trillion worth of global
trade passes through the South China Sea annually, which accounts for a third of
the global maritime trade. 80 percent of China´s energy imports and 39.5 percent
of China´s total trade passes through the South China Sea.
The disputes include the islands, reefs, banks, and other features of the South
China Sea, including the Spratly Islands, Paracel Islands, Scarborough Shoal,
and various boundaries in the Gulf of Tonkin. There are further disputes,
including the waters near the Indonesian Natuna Islands, which many do not
regard as part of the South China Sea. Claimant states are interested in retaining
or acquiring the rights to fishing stocks, the exploration and potential exploitation
of crude oil and natural gas in the seabed of various parts of the South China
Sea, and the strategic control of important shipping lanes.
The disputes involve both maritime boundaries and islands.There are several
disputes, each of which involves a different collection of countries:
2. Maritime boundary along the Vietnamese coast between the PRC, Taiwan,
and Vietnam.
4. Islands, reefs, banks and shoals in the South China Sea, including
the Paracel Islands, the Pratas Islands, Macclesfield Bank, Scarborough
Shoal and the Spratly Islands between the PRC, Taiwan, and Vietnam,
and parts of the area also contested by Malaysia and the Philippines.
5. Maritime boundary in the waters north of the Natuna Islands between the
PRC, Indonesia and Taiwan.
During World War II, the Empire of Japan used the islands in the South China
Sea region for various military purposes and asserted that the islands were not
claimed by anyone when the Imperial Japanese Navy took control of
them. Historical accounts note that at least France had controlled some of the
features in the region during the 1930s. After the war, Imperial Japan had to
relinquish control of the islands in the South China Sea in the 1951 Treaty of San
Francisco which, however, did not specify the new status of the islands.The
People´s Republic of China made various claims to the islands during the 1951
treaty negotiations and the 1958 First Taiwan Strait Crisis.
Upon Japan’s defeat in 1945, it was stripped of the area it had occupied in the
South China Sea.
In 1950, China, under communist rule, announced the removal of two dashes in
the Gulf of Tonkin without any explanation. The Ushaped lines became known as
the 9-dashed lines.
The lines, somehow, reflects what China foresees as their own version of history.
Basically, the claims are really rooted in its understanding that the territorial
features of the South China Sea constitute territory over which China has
historically held sovereign jurisdiction – that is, “ancestral properties” passed
down from previous generations. In their position papers, China expresses that
“Chinese activities in the South China Sea date back over 2000 years ago” with
China being “the first country to discover, name, explore and exploit the
resources of the South China Sea islands and the first to continuously exercise
sovereign powers over them.”
Sabah area ✔ ✔ ✔
Luzon Strait ✔ ✔ ✔
The archipelago includes about 130 small coral islands and reefs, most grouped
into the northeast Amphitrite Group or the western Crescent Group. The
archipelago includes Dragon Hole, the deepest underwater sinkhole in the world.
In 1974, when a North Vietnamese victory in the Vietnam War began to seem
probable, the PRC used military force in the Paracel Islands and took Yagong
Island and the Crescent group of reefs from South Vietnam. The government of
the PRC wanted to prevent the Paracel islands from falling under the control of
North Vietnam, which at the time was an ally of the Soviet Union. The PRC had
fought a brief border war with the Soviet Union in 1969 and did not want to have
a Soviet presence near its coast, which is why China resorted to "counterattack
in self-defense". The United States, in the middle of detente with the PRC, gave
a non-involvement promise to the PRC, which enabled the People´s Liberation
Army Navy to take control of the South Vietnamese islands.
Yagong Island (Chinese: 鸭 公 岛 ; pinyin: Yāgōng-dǎo) (Vietnamese: Đảo Ba Ba) is
an island in the Crescent Group (Yongle Qundao 永 乐 环 礁 ) of the Paracel Islands, in
the South China Sea. It is also known as "He Duck", (male duck), due to its shape. It is located
a few hundred metres SW of Observation Bank (Silver Islet, Yin Yu (银屿), Bãi Xà Cừ) in the NE
of the Crescent Group.
It is occupied by the PRC, and like all of the other Paracel islands, it is controlled
by China (PRC) and claimed by Taiwan (ROC) and Vietnam.
The Philippines entered the picture at roughly the same time as this. Tomas
Cloma, a Filipino lawyer, “discovered” the said island group. During the periods
of 1947 and 1950, fishing boats belonging to Tomas Cloma & Associates visited
the said group of islands with the original intention of putting up an ice plant and
cannery and to explore the guano deposits in the islands inhabited by birds.
In 1956, after another expedition on board PMI-IV, Atty. Cloma addressed a letter
to then Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Hon. Carlos P. Garcia, informing him that
about 20 Filipino citizens were undertaking survey and occupation work in the
South China Sea outside of Philippine waters and not within the jurisdiction of
any country, and that the territory being occupied was being claimed by him and
his associates as citizens of the Philippines, based on the rights of discovery
and/or occupation, “open, public and adverse as against the whole world.” He
named the claimed area “Free Territory of Freedomland.”
The Spratly Islands is a constellation of small islands and coral reefs, existing
just above or below water, that comprise the peaks of undersea mountains rising
from the deep ocean floor. Long known principally as a hazard to navigation and
identified on nautical charts as the “dangerous ground”, the Spratly Islands are
the site of longstanding territorial disputes among some of the littoral States of
the South China Sea.
By 1957, the Philippine government, through a letter from Vice President and
Secretary of Foreign Affairs Carlos P. Garcia addressed to Atty. Tomas Cloma
expressed a “willingness of the Philippine Government to extend diplomatic
protection to the fullest extent to Tomas Cloma” on the matter of Freedomland.”
But it took almost two decades before Cloma ceded, in favor of the Republic of
the Philippines, whatever rights his government had over Freedomland. Then,
through P.D. 1596 (11 June 1978), President Marcos created the Kalayaan
Island Group as a municipality of the Province of Palawan. But, Beijing already
assumed that the status of the islands was seemingly acknowledged as Chinese
territory through U.S. requests to the Taiwanese authorities for permission to
perform aerial surveys in the region between 1957 and 1961.
In 1988, PRC and Vietnam fought each other near the Johnson Reef. The PRC
had obtained a permit from the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission to
build five observation posts for the conduction of ocean surveys, and one of the
permitted observation posts was allowed to be located in the Spratly islands
region. The PRC chose to built its observation post on the Fiery Cross Reef,
which was isolated from the other islands in the region and was not occupied by
any state at the time. When it started to build the observation post in the terra
nullius Fiery Cross Reef, Vietnam sent its navy to the area to monitor the
situation.The two states clashed near the Johnson Reef, and after the clash,
China occupied the Johnson Reef.
Fiery Cross Reef, also known as "Northwest Investigator Reef", "Yongshu Reef" ( 永暑
礁) by the Chinese, "Kagitingan Reef" by the Filipinos, and "Đá Chữ Thập" by the Vietnamese.
The reef was named after the British tea clipper Fiery Cross, which was wrecked on the reef on
4 March 1860. (A later sister ship was also named Fiery Cross). The reef was surveyed by
Lieutenant J. W. Reed of HMS Rifleman, who in 1867 reported it to be one extensive reef, and
found the apparent wrecks of the Fiery Cross and the Meerschaum.
In 1994, the PRC occupied Mischief Reef, located some 250 miles from the
Philippine coast. Occupation was made in the middle of an energy resources
race in the Spratlys, where China lacked a presence while the other countries
were starting their oil exploration businesses. Mischief Reef marked the first time
when the PRC had a military confrontation with the Philippines, which at that time
was an ally of the United States.