Sunday, July 14, 2013

East China Sea: Chinese Grand Master Opens New Front

Background Briefing:
East China Sea: Chinese Grand
Master Opens New Front
Carlyle A. Thayer
July 4, 2013
James Byrne, Reporter, Interfax Energy, London:
We request your brief assessment of the attached BBC report that China is
constructing of a drilling rig near a disputed gas field in the East China Sea.
See: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-23159436
ASSESSMENT: China is the grand chess master picking a new front on which to move
after probing Japanese determination over the Senkakus islands that produced a
tense stand-off earlier this year.
The Chinese decision to proceed with the unilateral development of the gas field is
designed to leave the Japanese in a position in which they must either escalate or
back down. Since the Chinese are drilling within their side of the border, the
Japanese cannot escalate without China looking like the victim.
Suggested citation: Carlyle A. Thayer, “East China Sea: Chinese Grand Master Opens
New Front,” Thayer Consultancy Background Brief, July 4, 2013. All background briefs
are posted on Scribd.com (search for Thayer).
Thayer Consultancy provides political analysis of current regional security issues to
selected clients. It was officially registered as a small business in Australia in 2002.
Thayer Consultancy
ABN # 65 648 097 123
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BBC NEWS, 3 July 2013 Last updated at 13:24 GMT
Japan complains over China drill rig near disputed gas field
Mr Suga said Japan has expressed "serious concern" with China
Japan has expressed serious concern to China over the construction of a drilling rig near a disputed gas field in the East China Sea.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said Tokyo "cannot accept" China's development near the area.
The construction is in China's area, but Japan is concerned China would be able to siphon gas from its side.
A co-operation agreement between the countries had broken down amid confrontation over disputed territory.
The economic zones of both countries overlap at the gas field which the two countries claim exclusive excavation rights to.
They had agreed in 2008 that Japanese companies would invest in the area, but the agreement eventually stalled.
Tokyo now says a vessel has been spotted drilling a platform on the Chinese side about 26km (16 miles) from the disputed gas field.
"Our position remains that we cannot accept China's unilateral development in this region where Japan's and China's claims overlap, while delimitation in East China Sea remains undefined," Mr Suga said.
"We have conveyed to China our serious concern about the activities of the crane vessel. We told them, through diplomatic channels, we cannot accept it," he said.
China has yet to respond to Japan's concerns.
The two countries have been locked in an ongoing row over disputed territories and waters, especially over islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.
Japan controls the islands and sparked anger in China when it bought three of them from their private Japanese owner late last year.
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