-
Advertisement
South China Sea
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Britain to sail submarine-hunting warship through disputed South China Sea next month: minister

‘She’ll be sailing through the South China Sea and making it clear our navy has a right to do that’

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
HMS Sutherland, a British submarine-hunting frigate, will sail through the disputed South China Sea next month. Photo: UK Ministry of Defence
Agence France-Presse

A British submarine-hunting warship will sail from Australia through the disputed South China Sea next month to assert freedom of navigation rights, a senior official said Tuesday in a move likely to irk Beijing.

China claims nearly all of the resource-rich waterway and has been turning reefs and islets into islands and installing military facilities such as runways and equipment on them.

British Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said HMS Sutherland, an anti-submarine frigate, would arrive in Australia later this week.
HMS Sutherland at sea off the British coast. Photo: Reuters
HMS Sutherland at sea off the British coast. Photo: Reuters
We absolutely support the US approach on [the South China Sea], we very much support what the US has been doing
British Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson

“She’ll be sailing through the South China Sea (on the way home) and making it clear our navy has a right to do that,” he told The Australian newspaper after a two-day visit to Sydney and Canberra.

Advertisement

He would not say whether the frigate would sail within 12 nautical miles of a disputed territory or artificial island built by the Chinese, as US ships have done.

But he said: “We absolutely support the US approach on this, we very much support what the US has been doing.”

Advertisement

In January, Beijing said it had dispatched a warship to drive away a US missile destroyer which had “violated” its sovereignty by sailing close to a shoal in the sea.

Williamson said it was important that US allies such as Britain and Australia “assert our values” in the South China Sea, which is believed to hold vast oil and gas deposits and through which US$5.0 trillion in trade passes annually.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x