South China Sea disputes increase demand for US security presence in region: US defence chief

Disputes over territory in the South China Sea are causing countries in the region to increase their demand for an American security presence says Ash Carter. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Disputes over territory in the South China Sea are causing countries in the region to increase their demand for an American security presence, the US defence chief said on Sunday (Nov 1).

A US warship sailed within 12 nautical miles of one of China's man-made islands in South China Sea on Tuesday in the most significant US challenge yet to territorial limits Beijing claims around the Spratly archipelago.

The move triggered an angry rebuke from Beijing and a warning that a minor incident in the area, which is one of the world's busiest sea lanes, could spark conflict if the United States did not stop what it called "provocative acts."

"The attention to disputed claims in the South China Sea, the prominence of those disputes, is having the effect of causing many countries in the region to want to intensify their security cooperation with the United States," US Defense Secretary Ash Carter told reporters on his way to South Korea for high-level security talks.

Carter said a topic of discussion at an upcoming defence summit in Malaysia would include developments in the South China Sea, "the most notable of which in the last year has been the unprecedented rate of dredging and military activity by China."

Carter is due to arrive in Seoul later on Sunday and is scheduled to hold talks with South Korea's defence chief on Monday, focused on the allies' response to North Korea's nuclear and missile programmes.

He later flies to Malaysia for the meeting of Asean defence ministers, which China's Defence Minister Chang Wanquan is also due to attend.

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