Taiwan | Ma proposes plan to ease South China Sea tensions 

Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou speaks as he announces his South China Sea Peace Initiative during the 2015 ILA-ASIL Asia Pacific Research Forum in Taipei

Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou speaks as he announces his South China Sea Peace Initiative during the 2015 ILA-ASIL Asia Pacific Research Forum in Taipei

Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou laid out a plan yesterday to ease tensions in a vast, resource-rich Asian ocean where China has chafed against its neighbors by expanding islets with landfill to solidify its claims in the region.
Ma’s plan calls for setting aside sovereignty disputes over the South China Sea and jointly exploring for resources.
Taiwan has not been a high-profile player in the disputes in the South China Sea, although it uses roughly the same historical basis for its claim as China, and Ma’s initiative appeared aimed at shoring up foreign policy credentials at home.
“We emphasize that whereas sovereignty can’t be divided, resources can be shared,” Ma said in his speech yesterday at an Asia-Pacific research forum in Taipei.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Beijing has noted Ma’s proposal, but offered no opinion as to its feasibility.
“We believe that Chinese people across the strait are obliged to together maintain China’s territorial integrity and maritime rights, and the peace and stability in the South China Sea,” Hua told a regular briefing.
Taiwan, China, Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines claim all or parts of the 3.5 million-square-kilometer South China Sea. The ocean ranges from Taiwan’s southern tip southwest to Singapore.
In recent months China has made other claimants and their common ally the United States bristle by landfilling tiny islets, a way to extend its reach. The tropical sea is rich in oil, natural gas and fisheries as well as major international marine shipping routes.
In a sign of recent tensions, Beijing filed a formal complaint with the United States this week after an American military plane flew over one islet, and Japan has pledged to help Vietnam and the Philippines with defense asChina’s presence grows.
Taiwan’s initiative calls on “all parties concerned” to uphold the “freedom and safety of navigation and overflight” and avoid unilateral action that would escalate tension, according to a statement from the foreign ministry. It also suggests regional cooperation in developing the region’s resources.
Other South China Sea claimants are unlikely to react openly to Taiwan’s initiative as they lack diplomatic relations with Ma’s government. China claims sovereignty over Taiwan itself and uses economic clout to bar other nations from exchanges that cast Taiwan as a nation.
Ma did not discuss yesterday the basis for Taiwan’s maritime claim or that of other governments.
The United States wants the sea to stay open to shipping and flights, while Beijing has said Washington wants to keep a presence there to contain Chinese maritime expansion. Taiwan is keen to get along with the United States as its staunchest informal ally.
Ma’s initiative “is not enough for China and it’s not enough for the United States, so you just end up not meeting everyone’s expectations,” said Lai I-chung, vice president of Taiwan Think Tank.
The peace plan may also be calculated to bolster Taiwan’s ruling Nationalist Party ahead of the January 2016 presidential election as their chief opposition candidate develops a competing plan for the South China Sea, said Joanna Lei, chief executive officer of the Chunghua 21st Century Think Tank in Taiwan.
Ma has been criticized at home for lack of foreign policy achievements.
In 2012, he proposed a peace initiative for settling disputes in the East China Sea, parts of which are claimed by his government as well as China and Japan. Ralph Jennings, Taipei, AP

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