ID | 140405 |
Title Proper | China’s maritime embroilments |
Language | ENG |
Author | Dittmer, Lowell ; Weissmann, Mikael |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | CHINA’S MARITIME PERIPHERY OR ‘‘NEAR SEAS—the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea, and the South China Sea—are waters through which a great deal of vital commerce flows, as China, Japan, Korea, and numerous Southeast Asian countries are all major trading nations that import the energy and raw materials that sustain their thriving economies. Since 2009 the East and South China Seas have become increasingly fraught with tension. This has generally been attributed to rising Chinese assertiveness, but not because China has started making a lot of assertions it never made before. As the authors assembled here point out in replete detail, China’s explicit claims to the Diaoyu/Senkaku islets in the East China Sea date back at least to 1971, while it can trace its claim in the South China Sea back to the publication of the famous ‘‘nine-dashed line’’ map by the Nationalists in 1947 (at the time it contained eleven segmented lines; the victorious Communists subsequently dropped two). |
`In' analytical Note | Asian Survey Vol. 55, No.3; May/Jun 2015: p.447-454 |
Journal Source | Asian Survey Vol: 55 No 3 |
Key Words | South China Sea ; China ; China Maritime ; Unclos ; Maritime Embroilments ; Maritime Periphery |