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A satellite image taken last month of Chinese building work on Drummond Island in the Paracels. Photo: Centre for Strategic and International Studies

China ‘beefing up military’ on disputed islands in the South China Sea, says US think tank

Satellite images suggest further military build-up on the Paracel Islands, US researchers say

Satellite images suggest China has upgraded its military ­infrastructure in the disputed ­Paracel Islands in the South China Sea, ­according to a US think tank.

The Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Centre for Strategic and International ­Studies in Washington said on Wednesday that China now ­occupied 20 outposts in the ­Paracels, and that there had been an extensive military build-up on eight islands.

“Three of these now have ­protected harbours capable of hosting large numbers of naval and civilian vessels. Four others boast smaller harbours, with a fifth under construction at Drummond Island,” the group said on its website. “Five of the islands contain helipads, with Duncan Island housing a full helicopter base. And the largest of the Paracels, Woody Island, sports an airstrip, hangars and a [detachment] of HQ-9 surface-to-air missile batteries.”

The group said further expansion could help Beijing consolidate its presence and project its power in the region.

“Not all of China’s outposts in the Paracels currently house significant infrastructure, and many contain no more than one or two buildings … but the presence of small buildings and construction materials suggests China may be preparing to expand those features,” the group said.

A contrasting picture of Drummond Island taken three years ago. Photo: Centre for Strategic and International Studies

“This is part of China’s broader efforts to consolidate its grip on adjacent waters and disputed islands,” said Richard Heydarian, a political science professor at De La Salle University in Manila.

China has repeatedly promised it would not militarise its man-made islands in the South China Sea.

The think tank claimed in ­December that Beijing had placed weaponry on seven of the artificial islands it had built in the region.

At that time, China replied: “The necessary military facilities are mainly for self defence. When someone is flexing muscles at your doorstep, wouldn’t you ­prepare a slingshot?”

China’s strengthening of its armed forces and increasingly ­assertive claims to most of the South China Sea have created ­unease among its neighbours and the United States.

Chinese analysts say US President Donald Trump’s aggressive stance towards China is one of the things triggering its actions.

“That’s how China reacts to the outside world. If Trump did not make irresponsible anti-China remarks, the militarisation of artificial islands in South China Sea would be delayed,” Zhou Chenming, from the think tank Knowfar Institute for Strategic and Defence Studies, said.

“The situation now is particularly tense, and there is plenty of scope for misunderstanding that could lead to a real flare-up,” ­Kerry Brown, professor of Chinese Studies and director of the Lau China Institute at King’s College in London, said.

“The bottom line is that China believes this area is its own backyard for it to do as it pleases, and the US and others fundamentally disagree,” Brown said.

“It is hard to see an easy way of bridging the divide between these two positions.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Beijing ‘boosting military presence in Paracels’
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