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China launches combat patrols near Panatag

BEIJING – China yesterday carried out a combat patrol to test “strike capabilities” near Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal in the South China Sea, a flashpoint area also claimed by the Philippines.

Beijing has continued to press its claims to almost the entire South China Sea despite an international tribunal ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.

Panatag Shoal is 240 kilometers west of Luzon and nearly 900 kilometers from the nearest major Chinese land mass of Hainan.

China in 2012 used coast guard vessels to take control of the shoal, a triangular chain of reefs and rocks that are part of a rich fishing ground and had long been used by Filipino fishermen as a safe harbor.

Yesterday, the Chinese military’s Southern Theater Command said it had “organized a joint combat patrol in the sea and air space” near the area.

The maneuvers tested “the reconnaissance and early warning, rapid mobility and joint strike capabilities of theater troops,” Beijing said.

China has long used its coast guard to press its claims in the South China Sea.

And while the Chinese military had been deployed near Panatag Shoal (also known as Bajo de Masinloc) in the past, one analyst told AFP Wednesday’s action showed they were “becoming more aggressive and forceful.”

“It’s meant to intimidate,” Jay Batongbacal, director of the Manila-based Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, said.

“It’s definitely meant to send a message, a show of force,” he added.

There has been a series of escalating confrontations between Chinese and Philippine vessels in the South China Sea in recent months, including around a warship grounded for years by Manila on the contested Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal in the Spratly Islands.

One of the most serious incidents took place in June, when Chinese sailors brandishing weapons including knives and an ax boarded Philippine naval vessels near the strategic reef.

The Philippine military said one of its sailors lost a thumb in the confrontation in which Beijing’s coast guard also confiscated or destroyed Philippine equipment, including guns.

Beijing blamed the escalation on Manila and maintains its actions to protect its claims are legal and proportional.

In

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