Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi is interviewed by media in Vienna, Austria, on July 14, 2015.(Photo/Xinhua)
By sending its warship within 12 nautical miles of China's isles in the South China Sea, the United States is raising tensions in the waters and sending a dangerous signal to the region.
On Tuesday, the U.S. warship USS Lassen illegally entered waters near Zhubi Reef, part of China's Nansha Islands, without the permission of the Chinese government. Such a blatant provocation was naturally met with strong condemnation from China, which deems the U.S. move as a threat to China's sovereignty and security interests.
To justify this reckless move, high-ranking U.S. officials have been raising their voices recently accusing China of militarizing the South China Sea and claiming the U.S. operation is to exert "freedom of navigation" in the waters.
These are just pretexts the U.S. is using to mislead the public and confuse right with wrong.
China has repeatedly said it has no intention of militarizing the Nansha Islands in the South China Sea. All its deployments at the islands and reefs are necessary, limited and defense-oriented. As a nation that relies heavily on the sea lanes in the waters, militarization would threaten, instead of serving, its interests in the region.
As to freedom of navigation and overflights in the waters, they have never been a real issue of concern. China has reiterated many times that its reclamation work is primarily for civilian purposes and does not in any way hamper freedom of navigation.
Yet, these words have apparently fallen on deaf ears. By challenging a threat that does not exist, the U.S. move is creating a bigger and more real threat itself. By flexing its muscle on China's doorstep, the U.S. is using coercion to challenge China's legitimate territorial claims.
The U.S. warship displays exactly who is the real hand pushing the militarization of the South China Sea.
The U.S.' so-called freedom of navigation operations also go against its own public statements that it takes no stand over the territorial claims in the South China Sea.
The U.S. calls itself a Pacific country and claims it too has a stake in peace and stability in the region. If that is the case it should be playing a more constructive role in the waters, rather than stirring the waters at the risk of regional peace and stability.
If the U.S. still deems itself a responsible power, it should refrain from making further provocations.