US accuses Beijing of 'intimidation' in South China Sea

by with Shaun Tandon in Washington / Dene CHEN The United States on Monday accused China of intimidation in the South China Sea as it put forward its strongest language yet rejecting Beijing's claims in the strategic, dispute-rife waters. The Pacific powers traded tit-for-tat barbs over the South China Sea at a regional summit in Bangkok, with Beijing accusing the United States of ratcheting up tensions in the waters, a key global shipping route. Beijing lays claim to huge swathes of the sea, where it is accused of building military installations and fake islands -- and ramming fishing vessels. US national security advisor Robert O'Brien urged freedom of navigation as he led Washington's delegation to the summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and parallel East Asia Summit. "Beijing has used intimidation to try and stop ASEAN nations from exploiting their offshore resources," he said, addressing an ASEAN meeting Monday. "Big countries should not bully other countries," he later told reporters. As the summit was wrapping up, the US State Department released a report on its Asia-Pacific strategy with unusually strong language denouncing China's basis for its claims -- the so-called nine-dash line. Beijing's "maritime claims in the South China Sea, exemplified by the preposterous 'nine-dash line,' are unfounded, unlawful and unreasonable," the report said. US leaders have been taking an increasingly sharp tone on China but have generally focused on encouraging all claimants to resolve disputes peacefully, rather than Washington taking a position itself. Beijing claims the majority of the South China Sea through the nine-dash line, a vague delineation based on maps from the 1940s as the then Republic of China snapped up islands from Japanese control. The communists declared themselves China's sole representatives in 1949 after defeating the nationalists, who fled to Taiwan.











