South China Sea "Lawfare": Fighting over the Freedom of Navigation

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South China Sea "Lawfare" : Fighting over the Freedom of Navigation. / Wirth, Christian; Schatz, Valentin J.

Hamburg : GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, 2020. (GIGA Focus | Asia; Band 5).

Publikation: Arbeits- oder Diskussionspapiere und BerichteArbeits- oder Diskussionspapiere

Harvard

Wirth, C & Schatz, VJ 2020 'South China Sea "Lawfare": Fighting over the Freedom of Navigation' GIGA Focus | Asia, Bd. 5, GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg. <https://pure.giga-hamburg.de/ws/files/21509219/gf_asien_2005_en.pdf>

APA

Vancouver

Wirth C, Schatz VJ. South China Sea "Lawfare": Fighting over the Freedom of Navigation. Hamburg: GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies. 2020 Aug. (GIGA Focus | Asia).

Bibtex

@techreport{401cb0c2bab24bfe9f6cff3382710c42,
title = "South China Sea {"}Lawfare{"}: Fighting over the Freedom of Navigation",
abstract = "China{\textquoteright}s expanding military presence and assertive conduct provoked strong concerns among Western nations about the freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. United States-led naval operations in contested areas have emerged as the preferred countermeasure thereto. However, diverging legal positions, complex territorial and maritime disputes, and growing aspirations to enlarged national spheres of influence have resulted in unintended outcomes. Recently, a flurry of diplomatic statements and several largescale naval exercises have further elevated tensions.• A series of controversies over oceanographic surveying and military-surveillance activities in the South China Sea have brought to the fore the long-standing struggle between coastal states and naval powers as it shaped the UnitedNations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).• The US and China hold diametrically opposed views on the rights and freedomsof warships to navigate through territorial seas and operate in exclusive eco-nomic zones (EEZs). While China has been instrumentalising UNCLOS provi-sions and claims to historic rights as a security-political shield, the US has beenstriving to safeguard its armed forces{\textquoteright} freedom to manoeuver in East Asian seas.• China{\textquoteright}s attempt to control almost the entire South China Sea and US-led ef-forts to push back against the former{\textquoteright}s generally rising global influence havepoliticised the US Navy{\textquoteright}s Freedom of Navigation Operations and obscured theirobjectives. Never designed to counter territorial claims, these have come to re-present “shows of force.”• To put a halt to the accelerating militarisation of the South China Sea, the USand China need to overcome geopolitical tunnel visions regarding one another.Also, all coastal states have to recast their claims in conformity with UNCLOSand seek cooperative arrangements as the basis for future settlements.Policy ImplicationsEuropean diplomats and defence officials should encourage Southeast Asiangovernments to reduce, delimit, and regulate their overlapping territorial sov-ereignty, EEZ, and continental shelf claims. Unlike extra-regional powers{\textquoteright} bluntshows of force, such an alignment would put pressure on China and further therule of international law. Europe should also encourage the US to ratify UNCLOSso as to increase the credibility of its position",
keywords = "Law",
author = "Christian Wirth and Schatz, {Valentin J.}",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
language = "English",
series = "GIGA Focus | Asia",
publisher = "GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies",
address = "Germany",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - South China Sea "Lawfare"

T2 - Fighting over the Freedom of Navigation

AU - Wirth, Christian

AU - Schatz, Valentin J.

PY - 2020/8

Y1 - 2020/8

N2 - China’s expanding military presence and assertive conduct provoked strong concerns among Western nations about the freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. United States-led naval operations in contested areas have emerged as the preferred countermeasure thereto. However, diverging legal positions, complex territorial and maritime disputes, and growing aspirations to enlarged national spheres of influence have resulted in unintended outcomes. Recently, a flurry of diplomatic statements and several largescale naval exercises have further elevated tensions.• A series of controversies over oceanographic surveying and military-surveillance activities in the South China Sea have brought to the fore the long-standing struggle between coastal states and naval powers as it shaped the UnitedNations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).• The US and China hold diametrically opposed views on the rights and freedomsof warships to navigate through territorial seas and operate in exclusive eco-nomic zones (EEZs). While China has been instrumentalising UNCLOS provi-sions and claims to historic rights as a security-political shield, the US has beenstriving to safeguard its armed forces’ freedom to manoeuver in East Asian seas.• China’s attempt to control almost the entire South China Sea and US-led ef-forts to push back against the former’s generally rising global influence havepoliticised the US Navy’s Freedom of Navigation Operations and obscured theirobjectives. Never designed to counter territorial claims, these have come to re-present “shows of force.”• To put a halt to the accelerating militarisation of the South China Sea, the USand China need to overcome geopolitical tunnel visions regarding one another.Also, all coastal states have to recast their claims in conformity with UNCLOSand seek cooperative arrangements as the basis for future settlements.Policy ImplicationsEuropean diplomats and defence officials should encourage Southeast Asiangovernments to reduce, delimit, and regulate their overlapping territorial sov-ereignty, EEZ, and continental shelf claims. Unlike extra-regional powers’ bluntshows of force, such an alignment would put pressure on China and further therule of international law. Europe should also encourage the US to ratify UNCLOSso as to increase the credibility of its position

AB - China’s expanding military presence and assertive conduct provoked strong concerns among Western nations about the freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. United States-led naval operations in contested areas have emerged as the preferred countermeasure thereto. However, diverging legal positions, complex territorial and maritime disputes, and growing aspirations to enlarged national spheres of influence have resulted in unintended outcomes. Recently, a flurry of diplomatic statements and several largescale naval exercises have further elevated tensions.• A series of controversies over oceanographic surveying and military-surveillance activities in the South China Sea have brought to the fore the long-standing struggle between coastal states and naval powers as it shaped the UnitedNations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).• The US and China hold diametrically opposed views on the rights and freedomsof warships to navigate through territorial seas and operate in exclusive eco-nomic zones (EEZs). While China has been instrumentalising UNCLOS provi-sions and claims to historic rights as a security-political shield, the US has beenstriving to safeguard its armed forces’ freedom to manoeuver in East Asian seas.• China’s attempt to control almost the entire South China Sea and US-led ef-forts to push back against the former’s generally rising global influence havepoliticised the US Navy’s Freedom of Navigation Operations and obscured theirobjectives. Never designed to counter territorial claims, these have come to re-present “shows of force.”• To put a halt to the accelerating militarisation of the South China Sea, the USand China need to overcome geopolitical tunnel visions regarding one another.Also, all coastal states have to recast their claims in conformity with UNCLOSand seek cooperative arrangements as the basis for future settlements.Policy ImplicationsEuropean diplomats and defence officials should encourage Southeast Asiangovernments to reduce, delimit, and regulate their overlapping territorial sov-ereignty, EEZ, and continental shelf claims. Unlike extra-regional powers’ bluntshows of force, such an alignment would put pressure on China and further therule of international law. Europe should also encourage the US to ratify UNCLOSso as to increase the credibility of its position

KW - Law

M3 - Working papers

T3 - GIGA Focus | Asia

BT - South China Sea "Lawfare"

PB - GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies

CY - Hamburg

ER -