Beijing:The US Navy on Tuesday dismissed Beijing's protests over a freedom of navigation operation conducted near a Chinese-held island in the South China Sea, in the latest incident drawing new attention to one of the world's potential military flashpoints. In an unusual move, the Navy's 7th Fleet issued a rebuttal to China's objections to Tuesday's mission, calling it the latest in a long string of (Chinese) actions to misrepresent lawful U.S. maritime operations and assert its excessive and illegitimate maritime claims in the South China Sea.
China claims the area virtually in its entirety. The Navy said that China's sweeping maritime claims pose a serious threat to the freedom of navigation and overflight, free trade and unimpeded commerce, and freedom of economic opportunity for South China Sea littoral nations. As long as some countries continue to claim and assert limits on rights that exceed their authority under international law, the United States will continue to defend the rights and freedoms of the sea guaranteed to all," it said.
The Navy said its guided missile cruiser USS Chancellorsville on Tuesday asserted navigational rights and freedoms in the South China Sea near the Spratly Islands, consistent with international law. China called the action illegal and said it mobilized naval and air asserts to issue warnings and drive off the ship. The U.S. military's actions have seriously violated China's sovereignty and security, which is further ironclad evidence of its pursuit of navigational hegemony and militarisation of the South China Sea," a spokesperson for the Southern Theater Command, Air Force Col. Tian Junli, was quoted as saying. China has indisputable sovereignty over the South China Sea islands and their adjacent waters," Tian said.