Blocking
Chinese access to islands in the South China Sea would require the U.S. to
"wage war", an influential Chinese state-run tabloid said on Friday,
after U.S.
Secretary of State nominee Rex Tillerson suggested the strategy on
Wednesday.
Tillerson told
his confirmation hearing before the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee
that he wanted to send a signal to China that their access to islands in the
disputed South China Sea "is not going to be allowed". He did not
elaborate.
The United
States would have to "wage a large-scale war" in the South China sea
to prevent Chinese access to the islands, the Global Times said in an English
language editorial.
The paper,
which is known for writing strongly-worded, hawkish and nationalist editorials,
is published by the ruling Communist Party's flagship paper. It does not
reflect Chinese policy.
"Tillerson
had better bone up on nuclear power strategies if he wants to force a big
nuclear power to withdraw from its own territories," the paper added.
The editorial
also said that Tillerson, an Exxon Mobil Corp chairman and former chief
executive, was the most likely of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's cabinet
picks to be vetoed by congress.
"It is
suspected that he merely wanted to curry favor from senators and increase his
chances of being confirmed by intentionally showing a tough stance toward China,"
it said.
The paper did
not elaborate on either point.
A similar
article was also carried in the paper's Chinese language website that receives
thousands of hits every day.
There are also
legal questions of any U.S. attempt to block China's access, the editorial
said, asking if this might mean that Vietnam and Philippines also should be
denied entry.
China claims
most of the energy-rich South China Sea through which about $5 trillion in
ship-borne trade passes every year. Neighbors Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and
Vietnam also have claims.
The United
States has previously called on China to respect the findings of the
arbitration court in The Hague earlier this year which ruled in favor of the
Philippines, rejecting China's territorial claims in the strategic waterway.
Democratic
President Barack Obama’s administration conducted periodic air and naval
patrols to assert the right of free navigation in the South China Sea. These
have angered Beijing, but seeking to blockade China's man-made islands would be
a major step further and a step that Washington has never raised as an option.
REUTERS
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