Why Nansha Islands (Spratlys) belongs to China - Page 6
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Sprouter
United States1724 Posts
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Craton
United States17186 Posts
On June 19 2011 03:04 MamiyaOtaru wrote: Why would someone create an account here to post this. What need does China have for White Knights on random unrelated web forums This was my first thought, as well. It seems like random propaganda. Chinese ownership is hardly "undeniable" when half a dozen nations are contesting it. A partial list of events in a post with a clear pro-China bias is hardly sufficient proof, especially when no source is provided for any of them and there's no mention of counterarguments. You can't just ignore them as if they don't exist; you must address them if you want your claim to be adequately supported. There could just as easily be a list of 50 things that "disprove" Chinese ownership that one of the other governments have. | ||
Consolidate
United States829 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:46 Craton wrote: This was my first thought, as well. It seems like random propaganda. Chinese ownership is hardly "undeniable" when half a dozen nations are contesting it. A partial list of events in a post with a clear pro-China bias is hardly sufficient proof, especially when no source is provided for any of them and there's no mention of counterarguments. You can't just ignore them as if they don't exist; you must address them if you want your claim to be adequately supported. There could just as easily be a list of 50 things that "disprove" Chinese ownership that one of the other governments have. It really doesn't matter in the end. Each party will have their justifications, but China will win because it is strong and the others are weak. Might makes right. That said, China's claims aren't as ridiculous as some people here think. | ||
Ciryandor
United States3735 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:40 xarthaz wrote: IMO China is the best organised nation and so for development of greater good it is just to have them invest in the region and own the property. Unfortunately, they're also the most likely to invest the revenue gained from it back to suppressive activities like their lockdown on Tibet, or crushing any religious and temporal dissent that would be a threat to them like the Fa Lun Gong, evangelical Christians and Tianamen Square, all of which undermine their government's control of information and power. Do I even need to include suppression of ethnic strife by marginalizing the Uighurs in Xinjiang to this list? Finally, when you have political prisoners forced to do manual labor by day, and become WoW gold farmers at night, that isn't a rehabilitative process, it's exploitative; much like how denying residency to rural laborers and ex-farmers by city officials let them get away with not providing any sort of welfare for them, along with unemployment benefits. I, nor would more than a few other people, won't pay for oil coming from a state that doesn't respect basic human rights and endangers people systematically. I'd rather that Chevron or Exxon be the ones digging for it instead rather than the CNOOC. It may be derailing, but let's see if the statement above is enough to staunch the flow of certain undesirable elements in this thread, which we should actually have merged with the other Spratlys thread. | ||
Craton
United States17186 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:51 Consolidate wrote: That said, China's claims aren't as ridiculous as some people here think. It's not the claims themselves, its the manner the OP is written in and the lack of opposing information. | ||
hypercube
Hungary2735 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:40 Qi wrote: When we discuss US policy on stem cell research do we bring up the Civil War or the massacre of the Native Americans? No. Same thing here. We may digress, but it bears nothing to the issue at hand. A better analogy is bringing up the history of US interventions during the cold war whenever a American diplomatic initiative is discussed. It can be taken too far, but it happens and it is relevant in some situations. You didn't address my other point though. Are you interested in a discussion or your ONLY goal is to declare your own position? | ||
Melancholia
United States717 Posts
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Consolidate
United States829 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:55 Ciryandor wrote: Unfortunately, they're also the most likely to invest the revenue gained from it back to suppressive activities like their lockdown on Tibet, or crushing any religious and temporal dissent that would be a threat to them like the Fa Lun Gong, evangelical Christians and Tianamen Square, all of which undermine their government's control of information and power. Do I even need to include suppression of ethnic strife by marginalizing the Uighurs in Xinjiang to this list? Finally, when you have political prisoners forced to do manual labor by day, and become WoW gold farmers at night, that isn't a rehabilitative process, it's exploitative; much like how denying residency to rural laborers and ex-farmers by city officials let them get away with not providing any sort of welfare for them, along with unemployment benefits. I, nor would more than a few other people, won't pay for oil coming from a state that doesn't respect basic human rights and endangers people systematically. I'd rather that Chevron or Exxon be the ones digging for it instead rather than the CNOOC. It may be derailing, but let's see if the statement above is enough to staunch the flow of certain undesirable elements in this thread, which we should actually have merged with the other Spratlys thread. Oh please, your post pretty much betrayed the fact that your superficial knowledge of China stems from MSM tabloid headlines. "WoW Gold farmers by night" Give me a fucking break. People like you are a testament to the greatest trick Western Media has ever pulled. Stop derailing the thread with your drivel. | ||
Damian
Germany335 Posts
On June 19 2011 02:20 Qi wrote: Historical records that show why China owns Nansha Islands + Show Spoiler + 2011 June The Philippines destroy Chinese markers on the Nansha Islands You can add this May and June 2011 The demonstrations in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City followed a confrontation between a Vietnamese ship and Chinese patrol boats last month. Hanoi accused a Chinese patrol of cutting the cables of a Vietnamese ship conducting seismic research about 120km (80 miles) off Vietnam's coast. On Thursday, Prime Minister Dung made his first comments on the row, saying Vietnam's sovereignty was incontestable in areas of the Paracel and Spratly island groups. "We continue to affirm strongly and to manifest the strongest determination of all the party, of all the people and of all the army in protecting Vietnamese sovereignty in maritime zones and islands of the country," Mr Dung said in comments reported by the Thanh Nien newspaper. Later, Vietnamese officials accused a Chinese fishing boat of once again intentionally ramming cables from an oil exploration vessel inside its exclusive economic zone. The claim for these small islands / mere rocks has to do with Exclusive Economic Zones (UN law, which all claimants acknowledge). These zones look like this when ignoring ownership of the mentioned islands: Now if they are in fact Chinese islands it change the whole situation to this: Colors: China's EEZ EEZ claimed by China, disputed by the Republic of China (Taiwan) EEZ claimed by China, disputed by others And if you compare the Chinese claim in the first picture with the one in the second, you will see that the Chinese claimed territorial waters are even against the Third United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, because "in 1947, China published a map drawing a U-shaped line of claim across South China Sea." To conclude my point: I think Chinas claim is unreasonable and is going to harm their diplomatic relations to their neighbors even more (hi @ building aircraft carriers and hi @ having territorial disputes with nearly all neighbors). And if we say that the older the historical mention the better, then why is the current Chinese territory bigger than the one under the first Emperor? | ||
Consolidate
United States829 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:56 Craton wrote: It's not the claims themselves, its the manner the OP is written in and the lack of opposing information. The vast majority of islands are uninhabitable. The simple fact of the matter is that no one really 'owns' them or has 'owned' them for any significant period of time throughout history. Only two parties can claim to have first discovered them - those being China and Vietnam. Of the two, I'm slightly favor China's historical claims, but both are pretty tenuous. That said, I think that all talk about 'fairness' regarding these sorts of matters is completely juvenile. China will take these islands because no one is willing to stand up to them. | ||
Qi
China31 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:56 hypercube wrote: A better analogy is bringing up the history of US interventions during the cold war whenever a American diplomatic initiative is discussed. It can be taken too far, but it happens and it is relevant in some situations. You didn't address my other point though. Are you interested in a discussion or your ONLY goal is to declare your own position? US interventions during the cold was is DIRECTLY related to American diplomatic initiatives. How is territorial claim over an island against a foreign country/countries related to China's evil state policies? Answer that please. | ||
ZeGzoR
Sweden307 Posts
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trucejl
120 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:40 Ciryandor wrote: Wait, so the Manchu period from 1644 to 1911 wasn't very long? That was a Mongolian dynasty, not a Han Chinese one; and they were the ones that turned China inward in outlook; not exactly a good thing to do if you have land claims over certain territories and not secure them. The problem with the arguments for China AND Vietnam's pre-1800 claims is that they could just as well as be talking about the Paracel Islands, which have been a flash-point in their relations for quite a long time. Finally, if this comes down to arbitration, the ROC and Philippines have the best claims over the territory, the ROC by being virtue of the true successor state to the old imperial government that originally made those claims, and the Philippines through UNCLOS and Res Nullius. This does not negate your point about the PRC having some sort of say in it, as their militarily-weighted position has essentially muscled their right over a segment of the islands, regardless of other claims backed up by non-military arguments. Anyway, why am I bickering about this; we're supposed to be having a barrage of Weiner jokes. first, get your facts straight. Manchus are not Mongolian. The mongolian dynasty is the Yuan dynasty. Manchus were another minority ethnic group to the northern part of china. 267 years is not long when put into the context of how long china has been around. It would be long for the United States but not China. Even though it wasn't a han controlled dynasty, most of the government had han officials with only the very top having manchu. The point i was trying to make was that even though there were a lot of leadership change, it has always been the han people that was in the middle of it. vietnam has no pre-1800s claim. They were basically a colony of China with much of the region around that time. I don't understand how people can claim ROC is the true successor to anything Chinese considering it LOST a civil war. It would be like saying the confederate is the true owner of the southern tradition of the United States even though they lost. To put it blunt, ROC is just an exiled government that would not exist today if it weren't for the international community. Regarding phillipines and their claims through UNCLOS and Res Nullius, I am sure they are not the only ones that have documented claims for the regions. | ||
zestzorb
Thailand776 Posts
As a disclaimer, I have limited knowledge on the matter of Spratly Islands. From my perspective, the best way to determine the sovereignty of thess disputed isles is to let the inhabitant choose for themselves via a democratic process. | ||
Ciryandor
United States3735 Posts
On June 19 2011 04:58 Consolidate wrote: Oh please, your post pretty much betrayed the fact that your superficial knowledge of China stems from MSM tabloid headlines. "WoW Gold farmers by night" Give me a fucking break. People like you are a testament to the greatest trick Western Media has ever pulled. Stop derailing the thread with your drivel. You don't get what I was trying to do there. Let's see if the pro-China comments continue posting after I made that. It was for a very specific purpose. Clue: It has something to do with the Great Firewall. Also, do you want me to link that article on BBC about labor camps being used for gold farming? I am not as ignorant as you think I am. TL;DR You got trolled by a post meant for another purpose. | ||
Consolidate
United States829 Posts
On June 19 2011 05:07 Ciryandor wrote: You don't get what I was trying to do there. Let's see if the pro-China comments continue posting after I made that. It was for a very specific purpose. Clue: It has something to do with the Great Firewall. Also, do you want me to link that article on BBC about labor camps being used for gold farming? I am not as ignorant as you think I am. TL;DR You got trolled by a post meant for another purpose. You're so misguided. The GFR doesn't filter English words nearly as strenuously as Chinese words. And the BBC article has no source. | ||
hypercube
Hungary2735 Posts
On June 19 2011 05:03 Qi wrote: US interventions during the cold was is DIRECTLY related to American diplomatic initiatives. How is territorial claim over an island against a foreign country/countries related to China's evil state policies? Answer that please. If there's no way to definitely decide who is right it ultimately comes down to the question whether Chinese dominance in the region is desirable or not. And please do not ignore the other question this time. Are you interested in a discussion (based on considering others' position) or are you just here to advertise your position? | ||
Impervious
Canada4137 Posts
On June 19 2011 03:33 Ghad wrote: Lol, i heard about that, fair bit of gunboat diplomacy going on. Glad Norway and Russia were able to finally end our own territorial dispute just a few weeks ago. Seriously. These types of disputes are almost jokes compared to what's going on elsewhere. IMO, if all of the countries involved were to agree with binding arbitration by a 3rd party who has no interest in any possible outcome, we'd be able to solve this peacefully. I doubt that China would agree to this, since they currently have the "biggest backing" to their claim, and as such, have the most to lose through arbitration. But their claim seems ridiculously excessive to me. I'm not saying that a claim to some/many of the islands is unreasonable. Far from it. But claiming that your territory is extending all the way to the Philippines and off the coast of Vietnam like that? Yea..... | ||
Ciryandor
United States3735 Posts
On June 19 2011 05:11 Consolidate wrote: You're so misguided. The GFR doesn't filter English words nearly as strenuously as Chinese words. And the BBC article has no source. Then educate me, I'm listening to what you have to contribute to the thread. Edit: Any sort of arbitration would not work simply because of the reason the dispute exists in the first place; oil. Any major country would have an interest in having the country they can influence the most/have the best agreement/s get a larger chunk of the area for them to explore for those reserves. | ||
Qi
China31 Posts
On June 19 2011 05:07 zestzorb wrote: Qi, your argument depends on the premise that historical claims undeniably lead to current rightful claims, which apparently is a false premise. Following your logic, Cambodia would have a claim on Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam, due to historical claims in the reign of Suryavarman II. Macedonia should rule over Egypt, and Mongolia would have an absolute right on the whole China. As a disclaimer, I have limited knowledge on the matter of Spratly Islands. From my perspective, the best way to determine the sovereignty of thess disputed isles is to let the inhabitant choose for themselves via a democratic process. You are actually right here. But we should also take note of ontologies. In history, it is counter-intuitive to discuss what did not/could have/should have happened. Though they are interesting, we only discuss what happened and is happening. Power is a big part of this. As it is, China has both historical claim and power, though it tries to wield only soft powers and saber rattling. I personally hope it doesn't get to war. I doubt Philippines or Vietnam or other countries in that region will be willing to really push and provoke China. They will exhaust all peaceful means, I hope. It will take the intervention of another big country to tip the scales. It's wrong though, Mongols are a late addition to China's history. And, the Nansha Islands are merely rock islands. The claim is over the resources in the region and the geopolitical implications of having control of that region. As someone said earlier, if it's going down to voting, China will simply send a city's worth of population their in the dark of the night before the election and win it once and for all. kidding | ||
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