Beijing has warned Manila not to “stir up trouble” after the Philippine coastguard removed a floating barrier at a disputed reef that was deployed by China to block Filipinos from the traditional fishing ground within their country’s own exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
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What’s the history behind the dispute?
The incident occurred as tensions escalate between China and the Philippines over other areas of the South China Sea, foremost of which are the Spratly Islands.
China claims sovereignty over almost the entire South China Sea while several other countries, including the Philippines, have overlapping claims to parts of it.
Beijing’s claim that it controls almost the entire waterway was nullified by The Hague’s Permanent Court of Arbitration in a 2016 ruling, which called it groundless.
Allowing China to seize the Scarborough Shoal in 2012, without repercussions, was one of the Obama administration’s worst foreign policy blunders. They tried to make up for it later, but the damage was done.
Though it must be said that the root problem is the Philippines’ dysfunction. When China is sailing far from their shores to claim some rocks in your backyard, and you can barely project enough power to push back (with a navy still including WWII era ships, at least until a couple of years ago), and you’re barely doing anything to close the gap (military spending is 1% of GDP a year), well then, what do you expect?