A US Navy guided-missile destroyer, the USS Decatur, sailed through the South China Sea on Friday in a freedom of navigation operation intended to send a blunt message to China.
White
House spokesman Josh Earnest said the point was to let China know that
it cannot "unlawfully restrict the navigation rights, freedoms and
lawful uses of the sea that the United States and all states are
entitled to exercise under international law."
The Pentagon, in a statement, called the USS Decatur's trip "routine" and said it took place "without incident."
The
Chinese Defense Ministry released a statement Friday calling the act
by the US a serious breach of law and an intentional provocation.
Tensions
in the region have escalated over the last two years as China has
claimed land in massive dredging operations in the contested waters,
turning sandbars into islands equipped with airfields, ports and
lighthouses in some cases. The islands are more than 800 miles from the
Chinese mainland.
In
July, an international tribunal in the Hague deemed the bulk of China's
territorial claims in the South China Sea to have no legal basis under
the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
The
transit of the USS Decatur in the South China Sea was part of a routine
operation "in full compliance with international law," according to
Pentagon spokesman Cmdr. Gary Ross.
In recent months, Beijing has reacted angrily
to US freedom of navigation operations in the region, scrambling
fighter jets and boats and denouncing the actions as "threatening
Chinese sovereignty."
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