Satellite images show China has begun new construction in disputed South China Sea

Satellite photos of Chinese-controlled North Island, part of the Paracel Islands group in the South China Sea, taken on Feb 15, 2017 (top), and on March 6, 2017. PHOTO: REUTERS

HONG KONG (REUTERS) - China has started fresh construction work in the disputed South China Sea, new satellite images show, a sign that Beijing is continuing to strengthen its military reach across the vital trade waterway.

Regional military attaches and experts believe the work shows China's determination to build up its network of reefs and islets, even if it is seeking to avoid a fresh confrontation with the new administration of US President Donald Trump.

An image of North Island in the Paracels group taken on March 6 shows recent work including land clearing and possible preparation for a harbour to support what experts believe may be eventual military installations. Initial work was damaged in a typhoon last year.

The pictures, provided by private satellite firm Planet Labs, follow reports in January showing work undertaken on nearby Tree Island and other features in the Paracels, which are also claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan.

Diplomats briefed on latest Western intelligence assessments say Beijing is pursuing efforts to dominate its maritime "backyard", even if it tweaks the timing of moves to avoid being overtly provocative.

"The Paracels are going to be vital to any future Chinese attempt to dominate the South China Sea," said Carl Thayer, a South China Sea expert at Australia's Defence Force Academy. "We can see they are committed to militarisation, whatever the official rhetoric tells us, even if they are going to do it bit by bit."

UNCERTAINTIES OVER TRUMP

The more widely disputed Spratlys archipelago to the south are higher profile but the Paracels are key to China's presence in the South China Sea, China has in recent years temporarily based surface-to-air missile launchers and crack jet fighters at long established bases on Woody Island on the Paracels, helping protect its nuclear submarine facilities on Hainan Island.

North Island is part of an arc of reefs that are expected to form a protective screen for Woody, which includes civilian facilities and a listening post.

Zhang Baohui, a mainland security expert at Hong Kong's Lingnan University, says he believes China is pursuing long-held goals of strengthening its facilities in the Paracels, and has calculated the Trump administration would not over-react given other pressing priorities.

"There's also uncertainty with this young Trump administration, but this is very important work to the Chinese…the Paracels are vital to defending Hainan, which is in turn important to China's nuclear deterrent," he says. "The calculation here is that it is really only Vietnam that will be rattled by this."

The Vietnamese Foreign Ministry has not responded to requests for comment.

China's Defence Ministry has said it is "not familiar" with any work at North Island. "What needs to be stressed is that the Xisha Islands are China's inherent territory," it has said, using the Chinese name for the Paracels.

China fully occupied the Paracels in 1974 after forcing the navy of the-then South Vietnam off its holdings.

News of fresh Chinese activity comes as Rex Tillerson goes on his first visit to the region as US Secretary of State later this week. Tillerson sparked alarm in Beijing when he said in January that China should not be allowed access to islands it had built in the South China Sea.

A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, is unable to confirm new construction work on North Island but has said it would not be surprising.

"It would be in line with what they have been doing, why else would they clearing land on the islands but for militarisation," the official has said. "There is no other reason to have a presence there."

Diplomatic sources in Beijing say China is not looking for confrontation with the United States over the South China Sea, pointing to China's low-key reaction to last month's patrol of a US aircraft carrier strike group in the waters there.

China has recently sought to portray itself as being conciliatory over the disputed waterway, saying it and South-east Asian nations are committed to a peaceful resolution.

Last week, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said a draft code of conduct for behaviour in the South China Sea had now been completed and that tensions had "distinctly dropped".

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