OFW Filipino Heroes

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Philippines Military Billions Fund Mess, George Rabusa, AFP, Military

Former Armed Forces budget officer George Rabusa INQUIRER FILE PHOTO

On Jan. 27, 2011, retired Lt. Col. George Rabusa disclosed a multimillion fund scam in the military while testifying in the Senate blue ribbon committee's inquiry into the plea bargain between state prosecutors and former military comptroller Carlos Garcia.

Rabusa, who served as budget chief of the Office of the Armed Forces' Deputy Chief of Staff for Comptrollership from November 1999 until 2002, revealed how it had become a tradition for senior military officers to receive a pabaon (sendoff) in tens of millions of pesos.

Rabusa said that when Angelo Reyes retired as Armed Forces of the Philippines chief of staff in 2001, he received a total of P150 million from the AFP funds—broken down into a pabaon of "not less than" P50 million on his retirement, and the P5 million he received each month during his 20 months as the AFP chief of staff.

The whistle-blower also said that spurious transactions benefited former AFP Chief of Staff Efren Abu, and allowed former AFP Chiefs of Staff Diomedio Villanueva and Roy Cimatu to take home a total of P227.4 million and P110 million, respectively, by the time they retired.

In his testimony, Rabusa admitted that he himself had pocketed money from military funds and that he helped his boss, Garcia, "convert" almost P1 billion from 2001 to 2002 for distribution to ranking officers and other recipients outside the AFP.

Rabusa said the money came mainly from the annual military slush fund of P480 million, known as the provisions for command-directed activities, and allocations from the personnel services budget of the military.

Reyes denied the allegations against him and filed graft charges against Rabusa in the Office of the Ombudsman. Villanueva and Cimatu also vehemently denied the allegations.

Beset by controversy, Reyes committed suicide on February 8.

Slush fund

In a succeeding hearing, Rabusa said the AFP chiefs of staff as well as other officers also had a slush fund of P20 million for their personal and operational use. The fund was replenished by allocations skimmed off the salaries and operational expenses of military units.

Also brought up were the unexplained assets of former military comptroller Jacinto Ligot and his wife, Erlinda, in the country and in the United States.

The Senate hearings prompted the Bureau of Internal Revenue to file in the Department of Justice (DOJ) multimillion-peso tax evasion complaints against Garcia and Ligot, and their wives, in March.

Plunder complaints

In April, Rabusa filed plunder complaints against various military officials for their alleged involvement in the military fund scam. The main respondents were Abu, Villanueva and Cimatu, Ligot and Garcia.

Along with his complaint, Rabusa presented to the DOJ over 20 folders containing pieces of evidence, such as receipts, checks and other documents, to prove, he said, how money was misused during the tenures of Abu, Villanueva and Cimatu. Inquirer Research

China wants to takeover US Military Power - Control Japan & Philippines chain

U.S. CVN 78 Aircraft Carrier - USS Gerald R. Ford - First new class of nuclear-powered carriers. The Ship is designed to carry drones and launched figter planes more quickly.

The USS Gerald R. Ford was supposed to help secure another half century of American naval supremacy. The hulking aircraft carrier taking shape in a dry dock in Newport News, Va., is designed to carry a crew of 4,660 and a formidable arsenal of aircraft and weapons.

But an unforeseen problem cropped up between blueprint and expected delivery in 2015: China is building a new class of ballistic missiles designed to arc through the stratosphere and explode onto the deck of a U.S. carrier, killing sailors and crippling its flight deck.

Since 1945, the U.S. has ruled the waters of the western Pacific, thanks in large part to a fleet of 97,000-ton carriers—each one "4.5 acres of mobile, sovereign U.S. territory," as the Navy puts it. For nearly all of those years, China had little choice but to watch American vessels ply the waters off its coast with impunity.

Now China is engaged in a major military buildup. Part of its plan is to force U.S. carriers to stay farther away from its shores, Chinese military analysts say. So the U.S. is adjusting its own game plan. Without either nation saying so, both are quietly engaged in a tit-for-tat military-technology race. At stake is the balance of power in a corner of the seas that its growing rapidly in importance.

Pentagon officials are reluctant to talk publicly about potential conflict with China. Unlike the Soviet Union during the Cold War, Beijing isn't an explicit enemy. During a visit to China last month, Michele Flournoy, the U.S. undersecretary of defense for policy, told a top general in the People's Liberation Army that "the U.S. does not seek to contain China," and that "we do not view China as an adversary," she recalled in a later briefing.

Nevertheless, U.S. military officials often talk about preparing for a conflict in the Pacific—without mentioning who they might be fighting. The situation resembles a Harry Potter novel in which the characters refuse to utter the name of their adversary, says Andrew Krepinevich, president of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a think tank with close ties to the Pentagon. "You can't say China's a threat," he says. "You can't say China's a competitor."

China's state media has said its new missile, called the DF-21D, was built to strike a moving ship up to about 1,700 miles away. U.S. defense analysts say the missile is designed to come in at an angle too high for U.S. defenses against sea-skimming cruise missiles and too low for defenses against other ballistic missiles.

Even if U.S. systems were able to shoot down one or two, some experts say, China could overwhelm the defenses by targeting a carrier with several missiles at the same time.

As such, the new missile—China says it isn't currently deployed—could push U.S. carriers farther from Chinese shores, making it more difficult for American fighter jets to penetrate its airspace or to establish air superiority in a conflict near China's borders.

In response, the Navy is developing pilotless, long-range drone aircraft that could take off from aircraft carriers far out at sea and remain aloft longer than a human pilot could do safely. In addition, the Air Force wants a fleet of pilotless bombers capable of cruising over vast stretches of the Pacific.

The gamesmanship extends into cyberspace. U.S. officials worry that, in the event of a conflict, China would try to attack the satellite networks that control drones, as well as military networks within the U.S. The outcome of any conflict, they believe, could turn in part on who can jam the other's electronics or hack their computer networks more quickly and effectively.

Throughout history, control of the seas has been a prerequisite for any country that wants to be considered a world power. China's military buildup has included a significant naval expansion. China now has 29 submarines armed with antiship cruise missiles, compared with just eight in 2002, according to Rand Corp., another think tank with ties to the military. In August, China conducted a sea trial of its first aircraft carrier—a vessel that isn't yet fully operational.

At one time, military planners saw Taiwan as the main point of potential friction between China and the U.S. Today, there are more possible flash points. Tensions have grown between Japan and China over islands each nation claims in the East China Sea. Large quantities of oil and gas are believed to lie under the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea), and China, Vietnam, the Philippines and other nations have been asserting conflicting territorial claims on it. Last year, Vietnam claimed China had harassed one of its research vessels, and China demanded that Vietnam halt oil-exploration activities in disputed waters. The Philippines protested also against china for firing the Filipino fishermen in the waters under the Philippines Territory, China also harassed the PNOC – Philippines State Owned Exploration vessel conducting Survey in the Philippines Economic Zone and inside Philippines territory but china dismissed the protest of the Philippines and replied "We owned everything".

A few years ago, the U.S. military might have responded to any flare-up by sending one or more of its 11 aircraft carriers to calm allies and deter Beijing. Now, the People's Liberation Army, in additional to the missiles it has under development, has submarines capable of attacking the most visible instrument of U.S. military power.

"This is a rapidly emerging development," says Eric Heginbotham, who specializes in East Asian security at Rand. "As late as 1995 or 2000, the threat to carriers was really minimal. Now, it is fairly significant. There is a whole complex of new threats emerging."

Beijing's interest in developing anticarrier missiles is believed to date to the Taiwan Strait crisis of 1996. The Chinese government, hoping to dissuade voters in Taiwan from re-electing a president considered pro-independence, conducted a series of missile tests, firing weapons into the waters off the island. President Bill Clinton sent two carrier battle groups, signaling that Washington was ready to defend Taiwan—a strategic setback for China.

The Chinese military embarked on a military modernization effort designed to blunt U.S. power in the Pacific by developing what U.S. military strategists dubbed "anti-access, area denial" technologies.

"Warfare is about anti-access," said Adm. Gary Roughead, the recently retired U.S. chief of naval operations, last year. "You could go back and look at the Pacific campaigns in World War II, [when] the Japanese were trying to deny us access into the western Pacific."

In 2004, Chinese President Hu Jintao unveiled a new military doctrine calling for the armed forces to undertake "new historic missions" to safeguard China's "national interests." Chinese military officers and experts said those interests included securing international shipping lanes and access to foreign oil and safeguarding Chinese citizens working overseas.

At first, China's buildup was slow. Then some headline-grabbing advances set off alarms in Washington. In a 2007 test, China shot down one of its older weather satellites, demonstrating its ability to potentially destroy U.S. military satellites that enable warships and aircraft to communicate and to target bases on the Chinese mainland.

The Pentagon responded with a largely classified effort to protect U.S. satellites from weapons such as missiles or lasers. A year after China's antisatellite test, the U.S. demonstrated its own capabilities by blowing up a dead spy satellite with a modified ballistic-missile interceptor.

Last year, the arms race accelerated. In January, just hours before then U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates sat down with Chinese President Hu to mend frayed relations; China conducted the first test flight of a new, radar-evading fighter jet. The plane, called the J-20, might allow China to launch air attacks much farther afield—possibly as far as U.S. military bases in Japan and Guam.

The aircraft carrier China launched in August was built from a hull bought from Ukraine. The Pentagon expects China to begin working on its own version, which could become operational after 2015—not long after the USS Gerald R. Ford enters service.

American military planners are even more worried about the modernization of China's submarine fleet. The newer vessels can stay submerged longer and operate more quietly than China's earlier versions. In 2006, a Chinese sub appeared in the midst of a group of American ships, undetected until it rose to the surface.

Sizing up China's electronic-warfare capabilities is more difficult. China has invested heavily in cybertechnologies, and U.S. defense officials have said Chinese hackers, potentially working with some state support, have attacked American defense networks. China has repeatedly denied any state involvement.

China's technological advances have been accompanied by a shift in rhetoric by parts of its military. Hawkish Chinese military officers and analysts have long accused the U.S. of trying to contain China within the "first island chain" that includes Japan and the Philippines, both of which have mutual defense treaties with the U.S., and Taiwan, which the U.S. is bound by law to help defend. They now talk about pushing the U.S. back as far as Hawaii and enabling China's navy to operate freely in the western Pacific, the Indian Ocean and beyond.

"The U.S. has four major allies within the first island chain, and is trying to starve the Chinese dragon into a Chinese worm," Maj. Gen. Luo Yuan, one of China's most outspoken military commentators, told a conference in September.

China's beefed up military still is a long way from having the muscle to defeat the U.S. Navy head-to-head. For now, U.S. officials say, the Chinese strategy is to delay the arrival of U.S. military forces long enough to take control of contested islands or waters.

Publicly, Pentagon leaders such as Mr. Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have said the U.S. would like to cultivate closer military-to-military ties with China.

Privately, China has been the focus of planning. In 2008, the U.S. military held a series of war games, called Pacific Vision, which tested its ability to counter a "near-peer competitor" in the Pacific. That phrase is widely understood within the military to be shorthand for China.

"My whole impetus was to look at the whole western Pacific," says retired Air Force Gen. Carrol "Howie" Chandler, who helped conduct the war games. "And it was no secret that the Chinese were making investments to overcome our advantages in the Pacific."

Those games tested the ability of the U.S. to exercise air power in the region, both from land bases and from aircraft carriers. People familiar with the exercises say they informed strategic thinking about potential conflict with China. A formal game plan, called AirSea Battle, now is in the works to develop better ways to fight in the Pacific and to counter China's new weapons, Pentagon officials say.

The Navy is developing new weapons for its aircraft carriers and new aircraft to fly off them. On the new Ford carrier, the catapult that launches jets off the deck will be electromagnetic, not steam-powered, allowing for quicker takeoffs.

The carrier-capable drones under development, which will allow U.S. carriers to be effective when farther offshore, are considered a breakthrough. Rear Adm. William Shannon, who heads the Navy's office for unmanned aircraft and strike weapons, compared the drone's debut flight last year to a pioneering flight by Eugene Ely, who made the first successful landing on a naval vessel in 1911. "I look at this demonstration flight…as ushering us into the second 100 years of naval aviation," he said.

The Air Force wants a longer-range bomber for use over the Pacific. Navy and Air Force fighter jets have relatively short ranges. Without midair refueling, today's carrier planes have an effective range of about 575 miles.

China's subs, fighter planes and guided missiles will likely force carriers to stay farther than that from its coast, U.S. military strategists say.

"The ability to operate from long distances will be fundamental to our future strategy in the Pacific," says Andrew Hoehn, a vice president at Rand. "You have to have a long-range bomber. In terms of Air Force priorities, I cannot think of a larger one."

The U.S. also is considering new land bases to disperse its forces throughout the region. President Barack Obama recently announced the U.S. would use new bases in Australia, including a major port in Darwin. Many of the bases aren't expected to have a permanent American presence, but in the event of a conflict, the U.S. would be able to base aircraft there.

In light of China's military advances and shrinking U.S. defense budgets, some U.S. military officers have begun wondering whether the time has come to rethink the nation's strategic reliance on aircraft carriers like the USS Ford. A successful attack on a carrier could jeopardize the lives of as many as 5,000 sailors—more than all the troops killed in action in Iraq.

"The Gerald R. Ford is just the first of her class," wrote Navy Captain Henry Hendrix and retired Marine Corps Lt. Col. Noel Williams in an article in the naval journal Proceedings last year. "She should also be the last."

Friday, January 6, 2012

US defense focus on China & Iran in the Spotlight

Friday's national Chinese newspapers examine the US defense review and its focus on China, as well as possible talk on Iran sanctions.

The Global Times runs multiple reports on the announcement made by US President Barack Obama which puts priority on countering attempts by China and Iran to block US power projection capabilities in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) and the Strait of Hormuz.

An academic quoted by the paper says such strategy is "very unfavorable to China", but the country should "stay calm and keep developing itself in the next decade".

At the same time, China Daily and Shanghai Morning Post report that US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may discuss sanctions on Iran with Chinese leaders when he visit Beijing next week.

The Global Times warns in its editorial that future friendship demonstrated by Washington to Beijing "could only be obtained 'by force', but not 'coaxing' and 'begging'".

It further says the latest strategic adjustment by the US is a reminder of the importance of Iran to China "whether we like it or not", and China's society should not decide on how it should treat Iran based on US thinking.

In other diplomatic news, the People's Daily reports meetings between parliament speaker Wu Bangguo with the deputy speaker from the Vietnamese parliament, between Premier Wen Jiabao and Pakistani Chief of Army Staff Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, and between Politburo member Zhou Yongkang and Vietnamese Public Security Minister Tran Dai Quang.

And as the country is still in the throes of a hectic period of railway ticket booking for the Chinese New Year, Hong Kong's Ming Pao Daily News picks up a open letter by a migrant worker named Huang Qinghong.

Mr. Huang criticised the Railway Ministry for treating them unfairly by launching the online ticketing system, with the fact that most migrant workers do not know how to work computers being ignored.

People's Daily also publishes a commentary which suggests that the ministry should be more considerate, so as to encourage integration between migrant workers and the general urban population.

On the environment, various papers reports that the city of Beijing will finally release monitoring data on the PM2.5 particulates in the air - something that many netizens have been campaigning for.

China Daily says the local government in Tibet spent 3.2bn yuan ($507m; £327m) last year to turn the area into an "ecological security barrier". Measures include conservation of pastureland and wetland in the territory.

Beijing News also publishes a picture which shows a stretch of Xiangjiang River in the central city of Changsha completely dried up, and residents starting to grow vegetables on the riverbed.

USA will station warships in the Philippines & Singapore

The U.S. Navy said it would station several new coastal combat ships in Singapore and perhaps in the Philippines in coming years, moves likely to fuel China's fears of being encircled and pressured in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) dispute.

Regional defense analysts said the ships were small, but agreed the symbolism of the moves, which come after Washington announced it was increasing its engagement in Asia, would upset Beijing.

Last month the United States and Australia announced plans to deepen the U.S. military presence in the Asia-Pacific region, with 2,500 U.S. Marines operating out of a de facto base in Darwin in northern Australia.

In coming years, the U.S. Navy will increasingly focus on the strategic "maritime crossroads" of the Asia-Pacific region, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Jonathan Greenert wrote in the December issue of Proceedings, published by the U.S. Naval Institute.

He said the navy planned to "station several of our newest littoral combat ships at Singapore's naval facility," in addition to the plans announced by President Barack Obama for marines to be based in Darwin from next year.

"This will help the navy sustain its global forward posture with what may be a smaller number of ships and aircraft than today," he wrote.

Littoral combat ships are shallow draft vessels that operate in coastal waters and can counter coastal mines, quiet diesel submarines and small, fast, armed boats.

"If we put this into context, it's a fairly small scale of deployment and the combat ships are relatively small vessels," said Euan Graham, senior fellow in the Maritime Security Programme at Singapore's S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

"Encirclement is a phrase that does come up in Chinese debate about the U.S. strategy. They won't be happy about it, but there's nothing much that they can do to stop it."

Greenert wrote the ships would focus on the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea), conducting operations to counter piracy and trafficking, both of which are endemic in the area.

"Similarly, 2025 may see P-8A Poseidon aircraft or unmanned broad area maritime surveillance aerial vehicles periodically deploy to the Philippines or Thailand to help those nations with maritime domain awareness."

One source briefed on navy plans said there has also been discussion about stationing ships in the Philippines.

BIGGEST THREAT

The disputed ownership of the oil-rich reefs and islands in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) is one of the biggest security threats in Asia. The sea is claimed wholly or in part by China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam and Brunei.

The shortest route between the Pacific and Indian Oceans, it has some of the world's busiest shipping lanes. More than half the globe's oil tanker traffic passes through it.

Obama told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao at a regional summit in November that the United States wanted to ensure the sea lanes were kept open and peaceful. Wen was described by U.S. officials as being "grouchy" later at the summit, when other Asian countries aligned with Washington.

The Chinese premier said "outside forces" had no excuse to get involved in the complex maritime dispute, a veiled warning to the United States and other countries to keep out of the sensitive issue.

"A modest marine presence in Australia - 2,500 marines is not a large offensive force by any means - and ships in Singapore do not mean it's all about China," Paul Dibb, the head of the Strategic and Defense Studies Centre at the Australian National University, told Reuters.

"But having said that, China is being increasingly assertive on the high seas. So while I don't see the U.S. as encircling China, it would be silly to say China wasn't part of it."

CLOSELY WATCHED

These developments on the littoral combat ships (LCS) are being closely watched by Lockheed Martin Corp, Australia's Austal, General Dynamics Corp and other arms makers that are building two models of the new warships for the U.S. Navy, and hope to sell them to other countries in coming years.

"Because we will probably not be able to sustain the financial and diplomatic cost of new main operating bases abroad, the fleet of 2025 will rely more on host-nation ports and other facilities where our ships, aircraft, and crews can refuel, rest, resupply, and repair while deployed," Greenert wrote in the naval magazine.

Ernie Bower, who is with the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said the emerging strategy for Southeast Asia would be far different from the big U.S. bases established in Japan and South Korea in the past.

"We're exploring a new arrangement with a smaller footprint, that is mission-specific, and culturally and politically more palatable to countries," he said, adding it would be difficult for Washington to drum up much political support for big bases in the region. Forward-stationing versus permanent bases would also save the navy money, he said.

Greenert did not provide a timetable for the LCS stationing in Singapore.

In the Philippines, a U.S. ally that has clashed several times with China over the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) dispute, the moves were welcomed.

"We're together in Asia Pacific and we face common security challenges," said defense spokesman Peter Paul Galvez.

"We see several security challenges where we actually need inter-operability and interplay exercises including disasters, threats of terrorism, freedom of navigation, piracy and human trafficking. We cannot deny that we need their assistance in that aspect."

Thursday, January 5, 2012

World’s largest undeveloped copper-gold deposits in the Mindanao Island claimed 25 dead

Mindanao Island– A landslide buried small miners' bang-houses in a mining area on a southern Philippine island, killing at least 25 people and leaving dozens missing, local disaster and security officials said yesterday.

The incident, the second one in Pantukan town in almost nine months, took place near the Kingking area on the southern island of Mindanao, said to be one of the world's largest undeveloped copper-gold deposits.

Government officials said there had been cracks in the mountains, caused by earlier landslides, and recent rains could have loosened soil. Last month, Typhoon Washi and the flash floods it caused on Mindanao Island killed more than 1,200 people.

The latest landslide hit before dawn, burying people under soil and boulder, said Lieut-Col Leopoldo Galon, an army spokesman. He added 16 people were pulled out from under rubble and taken to a nearby hospital. Still, about 100 people remained unaccounted for, security and local officials said.

"There was no rain but we were awakened by rocks falling in to the roofs of our house," Saul Pinggoy, a small-scale miner, told radio station dzMM. "It was dark but we decided to move to safer grounds. Hours later, we saw tonnes of soil burying dozens of houses," he said, adding that residents were using shovels and their bare hands to look for missing relatives and friends under debris.

The government's mines bureau has listed the copper-gold and gold mining operations in Kingking as one of its priority investment projects.

But the Philippines last year banned small-scale mining in the area due to safety hazards.

Mr Pinggoy said they had been warned by the government to relocate to safer areas, but many people had continued small-scale mining operations, often illegal and unregulated.

Benito Ramos, head of the national disaster agency, said soldiers were sent to help the rescue and recovery operations while army helicopters airlifted injured miners to hospitals.

In April 2011, about 20 people were killed in the same town of Pantukan in rain-induced mudslides. – (hikot)

Monday, January 2, 2012

SOUTH CHINA SEA TURMOIL \'Cold War\' heats-up as Obama declares to assert against China

By: SYYED MANSOOR AGHA

In the light of US President Barack Obama's bid to assert against China, SYYED MANSOOR AGHA observes that China's present attitude towards its small neighbors is bound to give excuse to external forces to meddle in the region.

President Barack Obama has set a course for confrontation with Beijing when he declared his intentions to send military aircraft and up to 2,500 Marines to "protect American interests" and to expand U.S. influence in the Asia-Pacific region. He declared in the Australian Parliament in Canberra on Thursday (Nov 17), "The United States is a Pacific power, and we are here to stay," and "to deter threats to peace" in that part of the world.

Obama's declaration surprised many as the U.S. is facing economic slowdown forced to wind up its war in Afghanistan and Iraq. In an unmistakable message to China he said, "Let there be no doubt: In the Asia Pacific in the 21st century, the United States of America is all in."

Certainly, China has invited U.S. ire by threatening its small neighboring countries. China even threatened Indian navy ships in South China International waters.

For Obama, Asia represents both a security challenge and an economic opportunity. The region is a conduit for more than one-third of the world's seaborne trade and half its traffic in oil and gas, and major petroleum deposits are believed to lie below the seabed. The West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) region also matters importance because here the competing interests of the US and China overlap in Asia.

China reacted sharply to the U.S. assertion as Premier Wen Jiabao on Nov 18, warned against interference by "external forces" in the region. Beijing sees the initiatives as intruding into its own sphere of influence. "The dispute on the South China Sea is a matter that has been going on for years. It should be resolved by the relevant sovereign states through friendly consultation and discussion directly," Wen said in his address in ASEAN summit.

"External forces should not use any excuses to interfere," he added. "China will never seek hegemony and we are against any hegemonic behavior."

 THE DISPUTE

Real cause of fissures in the region is China's claim over the strategic sea extending for more than 1,000km (621 miles) off its southern coast and reaching into what Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei see as their own waters. Beijing says it does want a peaceful solution but continues hard postures. Vietnam and the Philippines say Chinese ships have stepped up harassment of vessels involved in oil exploration and fishing.

China's increasingly assertive behavior over its claimed huge U-shaped maritime area has alarmed its neighbors. They are keen to negotiate with China as a bloc – but China prefers to tackle the issue through bilateral negotiations, and it does not want the US involved at all.

 ON INDIAN INTERESTS

The dispute has also bearing on Indian interest as most of their trades to American Continents are routed through this sea. Beijing also raised objections over oil exploration in two Vietnamese blocks by India's ONGC Videsh Ltd (OVL). These blocks are well in maritime limits of Vietnam. In another incident, an Indian Navy warship was also warned by an unknown source over radio transmission set to move out of the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea).

Recently speaking in a seminar in New Delhi, Navy chief of India Admiral Nirmal Verma mentioned, "We are seeing edginess in relations between countries of this region. The potential for conflict in West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) and instability in Korean Peninsula have heightened awareness of analysts to region's shortcomings in terms of institutional arrangements to resolve potential crises. The South China Sea is an area of significant concern."

"Developments in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) and the outcomes will have major implications not only for countries in the region but for the world at large, as many nations have considerable economic interests in the region," he said.

 WHAT IRKED AMERICA

Immediate cause of U.S. reflex is obviously rooted in Chinese warning to an American oil company ExxonMobil. The company discovered hydrocarbons in August in a well drilled off the coast of central Vietnam under a license from the Vietnamese government to explore offshore blocks 117, 118 and 119; an area within Vietnam's 200-mile exclusive economic zone under international maritime law.

"Any foreign company shall not engage in oil and gas activities in waters under Chinese jurisdiction. This position is clear and consistent," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei warned on Oct 31.

It is estimated that the South China Sea may hold 213 billion barrels of oil (80 per cent of Saudi Arabia's reserves) and 2 quadrillion cubic feet of natural gas. That's more than five times the 350.8 trillion cubic feet of gas held in North America as cited in 2008 by the U.S. Energy Information Agency. China, the world's second-largest economy, claims "indisputable sovereignty" over most of the these reserves, including blocks off Vietnam that Exxon Mobil Corp. and Russia's Gazprom OAO and ONGC of India are exploring. How can America let this black gold go inclusively in the hands of its biggest rival?

INDIAN STAND

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh discussed the issue with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Friday (Nov 18), on the sidelines of the ASEAN Summit in Bali and asserted India's right to explore oil in the South China Sea, which China claims as its exclusive domain. "This matter [South China Sea] did come up in the context of East Asia Summit (EAS) and the PM observed that the issues of sovereignty must be resolved according to international law and practice. And he also mentioned that exploration of oil and gas in South China Sea is purely a commercial activity," Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokespersons told reporters.

During their 55 minutes long meeting, Premier Wen Jiabao said he valued the role India displayed in EAS, the MEA said. Wen reportedly said, "India and China must work hand-in-hand to ensure that the 21st century belongs to Asia (and not to Europe and U.S.A.)." Singh told Wen that the two must work together and cooperate with each other as the two biggest economies of Asia.

In the backdrop of heightened tensions by Obama's assertion, India and China maintained that there was enough space for both to flourish. During their exchange of views on important issues, Wen reminded Dr. Singh of his comment that there was enough space for the two countries to grow. To that he added that there "were enough areas in the world where China and India can enhance cooperation".

"It is important for our two countries, the most populous in the world, to achieve modernization and work hand in hand," the Chinese leader said, adding that he was "fully confident that that kind of world will arrive."

It seems that India has resolved the issue with China during the meeting as in New Delhi, it was officially stated that ONGC Videsh Ltd. will continue its activity in the region.

INDIA'S LOOK EAST POLICY

After neglecting the East Asia region for a long time, India has now awakened and started pursuing it "Look East" Policy vigorously. Prime Minister Singh's presence in Bali summit underlines rediscovered importance of the region. U.S. intervention is detrimental for both emerging economic powers of Asia – India and China. That is why both have agreed to work together in the region.

Before this Summit, "India hosted the leaders of Myanmar and Vietnam in early October, underscoring the seriousness with which it is pursuing its Look East policy as it forges close economic and security ties with the two to counter China's penetration. India's policy was explicitly designed to initiate New Delhi's re-engagement with East Asia. This is a time of great turmoil in the Asian strategic landscape and India is trying to make itself relevant to the region's members, observed The Japan Times in a detailed commentary.

"With its political and economic rise, Beijing has started dictating to its neighbors creating tensions. The U S and its allies are re-assessing their regional strategies to counterbalance China's growing power. It is in this broader context that the recent visits by Myanmar and Vietnam's presidents to India assume significance," the Japan Times further said.

RESOLUTION OF DISPUTE

Leaders of Communist Parties of Vietnam and China are engaged in solving this dispute. Two countries also signed a six-point agreement on basic principles to settle maritime issues last month after bilateral talks in Beijing. However, "China is becoming much more confident in the region and there are signs it is becoming giddy with success. It has become much more influential, much more quickly than it expected," says Dr Kerry Brown of the Asia Program at Chatham House in London.

Vietnam and the Philippines in recent months have seen the snarl of a resurgent regional power that is fast losing patience with the gripes of smaller neighbors over maritime borders.

"If these countries do not want to change their ways with China, they will need to prepare for the sound of cannons. It may be the only way for the dispute in the sea to be resolved," said the state run newspaper, the Global Times, in a recent editorial.

"The growth of Chinese military spending is beginning to translate it into hard power," says John Hemmings, an analyst at the Royal United Services Institute.

Only magnanimity will help China to infuse confidence in small neighboring countries. Its present attitude is bound to give excuse to external forces to meddle in the region.

[The writer is Gen.Sec, Forum for Civil Rights, email: syyedagha@hotmail.com]

Sunday, January 1, 2012

South Korea Beefs Up Steps to Fight Chinese Illegal Fishing in the Sea

South Korea on Monday (December 26, 2011) said it will bolster efforts to counter illegal Chinese fishing in its waters, including issuing more firearms to coast guard officers and raising penalties against offenders.

The move comes after a South Korean coast guard officer died when he was stabbed by a Chinese fishing-boat captain earlier this month.

Seoul has been under domestic pressure to make a robust response to the incident, which came amid a rise in fishing by Chinese boats in South Korean territorial waters this year. Chinese fishing crews, seeking richer catches outside their regular fishing grounds, have become a flash point in broader territorial tensions involving China and its neighbors.

As well as clashing with countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam over sovereignty in the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea) in resource-related disputes, China was drawn into a diplomatic spat with Japan when a Chinese fishing boat and a Japanese coast-guard vessel collided in the East China Sea last year.

The Korean government says between 2,000 and 3,000 Chinese fishing boats operate illegally in Korean territory each day during peak season. Between January and November this year, 497 ships were caught, compared with 370 last year. A spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry said he couldn't immediately comment late Monday.

Korean coast guard officers cite increasingly aggressive behavior by Chinese fishermen trying to avoid arrest. Officers boarding Chinese ships have been attacked with metal pipes and knives, according to the coast guard, while Chinese boats have also been spotted banding together to thwart local authorities. In the past 10 years, 53 Korean officers have been injured while seizing Chinese ships. One officer was killed in 2008.

In its latest response, South Korea said it will start placing ex-special forces personnel into coast guard teams responsible for apprehending fishing boats, improve the coast guard's body armor and increase the number of patrol ships. The fishing equipment of repeat offenders also will be confiscated.

Officers will be allowed to use their firearms when their lives are endangered or there is no other way to subdue the perpetrators, said Yim Jong-yong, head of the South Korean prime minister's office.

Mr. Yim said Seoul will step up diplomatic efforts to get Beijing to cooperate in reining in the illegal fishing activities. Following the incident on Dec. 12 when the coast guard officer was stabbed by a Chinese fisherman, Beijing initially called for Seoul to protect the rights of the fishermen. It subsequently said it would work to educate its fishermen.

The Chinese captain involved in the Dec. 12 incident is currently in the custody of Korean prosecutors.

Top 17 overjoyed Photos for New year 2012 Celebration

December 31, 2011 – January 1 2012 the break of the year was welcome by a fabulous fireworks and other traditional and cultural celebration around the World.

17 Photos disclosed as the most ecstatic celebration from around the globe that includes top photos from the Philippines, Germany, Russia, London, Macedonia, Austria, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Afghanistan Lithuania, and Ireland as posted on ninemsn.com.au  Australia.

See other photos in hikot album

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Filipinos watch a fireworks and water fountain display at Manila's Rizal Park, Philippines

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Fireworks exploded from the iconic Big Ben in London, UK

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Confetti drops as a Filipino blows his paper horn in Manila, Philippines

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Fireworks go off over the monument of the Aleksandar the Great in  Skopje, Macedonia

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Fireworks light the sky above the Cathedral Square in Vilnius, Lithuania

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Isla Stanton, 5, writes with a sparkler in Ashford, Kent, United Kingdom

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Jessica Ong from Singapore starts her new year celebrations early, Singapore

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- New Year 2012 - Worrld Top Photos-  A soldier with the NATO-led forces gets into the spirit in Kabul, Afghanistan

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Partygoers outside the Temple Bar, Dublin, Ireland

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Revellers share a New Year's kiss in Berlin, Germany

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Taipei 101, the world's second-tallest building, ushering in the new year, Taiwan

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- The Giant Ferris wheel at the Prater is illuminated as fireworks go off in Vienna, Austria

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- The London Eye was at the centre of a blaze of pyrotechnics , United Kingdom

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- The Quadriga at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin shortly after midnight, Germany

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Thousands of locals gather to see the fireworks display at the Red Square, Moscow, Russia

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos- Visitors are  showered with confetti as they celebrate a light show in China

New Year 2012 - World Top Photos-Beijing's Temple of Heaven is lit up with special light displays, China

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