South China Sea: doubts surface over Philippines’ deal with Beijing on shoal missions
- The two sides reached an apparent agreement, but insiders and analysts suggest tensions could yet flare again despite the talks
Analysts say Beijing seems to be framing the arrangement in a way that suggests the Philippines has conceded to its demands – a characterisation vehemently denied by Philippine officials.
These divergent comments have only heightened the uncertainty surrounding the latest development in the long-standing maritime dispute.
However, the terse three-paragraph statement provided few details, save that the arrangement was reached following discussions between the two on July 2 in Manila during their 9th Bilateral Consultation Mechanism on the South China.
On Monday, China’s foreign ministry issued a statement saying the two sides had “agreed to jointly manage differences in maritime issues”. Beijing asserted that the Philippines was “violating China’s sovereignty” by maintaining the grounded naval ship on the disputed shoal, and said it would be “willing to allow” resupply efforts if Manila provided advance notice and allowed Chinese monitoring and “on-site verification”.