Milestones |
Details |
Source documents |
1909 |
In
March, China discovered ongoing Japanese guano mining operations on Pratas
Island. By November, Qing Dynasty officials negotiated a settlement with the
Japanese government for recognition of Chinese sovereignty over Pratas
Island. Under the settlement, China provided financial compensation to the
Japanese guano miners.
Pratas
Island is located between the Philippines and Taiwan in the northernmost part
of the South China Sea. It is not a part of any island group. |
B Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 51.
|
1909 |
In
April 1909, with the Pratas Island episode ongoing, the Governor of Guandong
sent Admiral Li Zhun on an official mission to survey the Paracel Islands for
incorporation into China’s territory.
The
Paracels lie near the coasts of Hainan and Vietnam. |
Francois -Xavier
Bonnet, ‘Geopolitics
of Scarborough Shoal’, Irasec’s
Discussion Papers, 14, November 2012, p. 14. |
January
1935 |
After
the annexation of Manchuria by Japan and attempts by the French government to
claim the Paracels and Spratlys as part of France’s colonial holdings in
Vietnam, the Republican Chinese Government’s geographical committee published
a map of Chinese territory which included the Paracels and Spratlys.
The
Spratlys, lying near Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei and Malaysia, became the
southernmost part of China’s territorial claims. |
Francois -Xavier
Bonnet, ‘Geopolitics
of Scarborough Shoal’, Irasec’s
Discussion Papers, 14, November 2012, p. 17-18.
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 55. |
1936 |
Bai
Meichu, a nationalist Chinese geographer, published a map featuring a ‘U
shaped line’ which represented most of the islands and features in the South China
Sea as China’s sovereign territory. The line extended as far south as James
Shoal, around 80 km off the Borneo coast of Malaysia. |
L
Jinming & L Dexia, ‘The Dotted Line on the Chinese Map of the South
China Sea: A Note’, Ocean Development and International Law, 34, January 2003, p. 289.
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 56. |
1938 |
Faced
with Imperial Japanese expansion into the South China Sea, Philippine
President Manuel Quezon requested that the American State Department research
the ownership status of Scarborough Shoal. This research was intended to
support an official Philippine claim for the Scarborough Shoal, though
ultimately no such official claim was made. |
Francois -Xavier
Bonnet, ‘Geopolitics
of Scarborough Shoal’, Irasec’s
Discussion Papers, 14, November 2012, p. 11. |
February
1939 – March 1939 |
After
the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese war, Japan established effective control
over Hainan, then the Paracels and finally annexed the Spratlys. Imperial Japan's
strategy for expansion in the Pacific involved controlling the South China
Sea. |
L Peng Er, ‘Japan and the Spratlys Dispute: Aspirations and
Limitations’, Asian Survey, 36(10),
1996, p. 997. |
1947 |
Settlements
following Japanese defeat in the Second World War required Japan to
relinquish its territorial holdings in the South China Sea, which triggered
competition between China, the Philippines, and the French colonial
government in Vietnam for ownership of South China Sea features. In pursuit
of such ownership, the Republic of China (ROC) drew up a map of the South
China Sea featuring an eleven-dash line, based on the ‘U shape line’ drawn by
nationalist geographer Bai Meichu ten years earlier. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 57-59.
|
October
1949 |
Mao
Zedong established the People’s Republic of China following the victory of
Chinese Communist forces over the Nationalists. The ROC government retreated
from Mainland China to Taiwan, and withdrew from Woody Island in the Paracel
Islands and Itu Aba in the Spratly Islands. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, pp. 63-64.
The
Guardian Special Correspondent, ‘Mao Zedong proclaims the establishment of the
People’s Republic of China’, The Guardian (online archive), October 2019. |
May
1950 |
Philippines
President Elpido Quirino asserted his nation’s sovereignty over the Spratly
Islands. He had previously claimed the Spratlys were essential to the security
of the Philippines, based on Imperial Japan’s use of the Spratlys during the
Second World War. PRC authorities denounced Quirino’s statements as ‘preposterous
propaganda’ and asserted that the PRC ‘will never allow the Nansha (Spratly)
Islands or any other land which belongs to China, to be encroached upon by any
foreign power’. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, pp.
138–139.
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 66. |
September
1951 |
Zhou
Enlai, the PRC’s Foreign Minister, released a statement regarding the South
China Sea during the development of the Treaty of Peace with Japan, which
Japan signed with forty-eight countries to conclude war with the Allied
Powers and to end American occupation of the Japanese mainland. It criticised
the draft treaty for ‘deliberately mak[ing] no mention of restoring
sovereignty’ over the Spratly and Paracel Islands to the PRC, which, among
other islands within the eleven-dash line, he claimed ‘have always been
China’s territory’. The Vietnamese delegation to the conference made a
similar claim to sovereignty over the Paracels and Spratlys. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, pp.
27-28.
Treaty of Peace with Japan, United Nations, New York, (136, p. 45) |
1953 |
Without
any public or explicit explanation, maps published by the PRC began to show a
nine-dash line rather than an eleven-dash line, differing from territorial
claims on maps published by the former ROC government of mainland China and
from maps published in 1949 by the PRC government. The Gulf of Tonkin was
inside the eleven-dash line, but outside of the nine-dash line. |
T
Ikeshima, ‘China’s Dashed Line in the South China Sea: Legal Limits and Future Prospects’, Waseda Global Forum, 10, 2013,
p. 26. |
1955 |
PRC
established a troop presence on Woody Island, the largest of the Paracel
Islands. |
Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative, ‘Woody
Island‘, Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative Website, n.d. |
1956 |
The
ROC government, following its relocation to Taiwan, reoccupied Itu Aba. Also
known as Taiping Island, Itu Aba is the largest island in the Spratlys, and had
been used as a submarine base by the Japanese during World War II. The ROC
occupies the island to this day. |
CY
Lin, ‘Taiwan’s Spratly Initiative in the South China Sea’, China Brief, 8(4), 29 February
2008. |
1956 |
South
Vietnamese naval units landed on several of the Spratly Islands and erected
landmarks and flags. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, pp.
29-30. |
May
1956 |
Philippines
Foreign Minister, Carlos Garcia, stated that some of the Spratly Islands
should be recognised as Philippines sovereign territory due to their
proximity. This prompted counter claims from both the PRC and South
Vietnamese Governments. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, p.
29. |
May
1956 |
After
his brother took possession of several of the Spratly Islands, and having
issued his ‘Notice to the Whole World’, Philippine fishing magnate Tomás
Cloma declared the establishment of the ‘Free Territory of Freedomland’ off
the coast of Palawan, Philippines. This drew protests from the PRC media and
Government. ROC navy vessels proceeded to confront Cloma’s vessels and
dismantled the structures they had built on the islands of the claimed
region. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, pp. 66-67. |
December
1957 |
Under
the anonymous pseudonym ‘Commentator’, a PRC official published a defence in
a Communist Party Publication of the Indonesian Government’s decision to extend
its territorial sea from 3 to 12 nautical miles, and to apply the archipelagic
principle when delimiting its territorial sea. |
H
Chiu, ‘China and the Law of the Sea Conference’, Contemporary Asian Studies,
41(4), 1981, p. 2. |
1958
September |
The
PRC’s Parliament passed its ‘Declaration of the Government of the Peoples
Republic of China on China’s Territorial Sea’, which asserted the PRC’s
sovereignty over the Paracel and Spratly Islands, and claimed that its
territorial sea extended to 12 nautical miles from baselines ‘composed of the
straight lines connecting base-points on the mainland coast and on the
outermost coastal islands.’ The United States denounced the move, describing
it as an ‘attempt to cloak aggressive purposes.’ |
Declaration of the Government of the Peoples
Republic of China on China’s Territorial Sea, 4 September 1958.
H
Chiu, ‘China and the Law of the Sea Conference’, Contemporary Asian Studies,
41(4), 1981, p. 3.
|
March
1959 |
After
82 Chinese fishermen were arrested by South Vietnamese troops in the Crescent
Group of the Paracel Islands, the PRC protested that ‘the South Vietnam Navy
has openly violated China’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.’ |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, pp.
32-33. |
1956-1966 |
Following
Khrushchev’s On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences speech, and
several diplomatic and geostrategic spats, a split opened between the PRC and
Soviet Union. This transformed the global geostrategic and diplomatic
landscape, putting the PRC on a defensive footing in its region, and leading
them to suspect that the USSR would use North Vietnam as a base of operations
in the South China Sea. |
P
Roberts, P Vamos, D Kaple. ‘Forum: Mao, Khrushchev, and China’s
Split with the USSR: Perspectives on The Sino-Soviet Split’, Journal of Cold War Studies,
2010, pp. 149-150 & 152-158.
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial
Disputes: The Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, pp.
104-105. |
1965 |
A
PRC official published an article protesting the creation by the United States
of a ‘combat zone’ off the coast of Vietnam which extended to 9 nautical
miles from Triton Island in the Paracel Islands. It described the zone as a ‘menace
to China’s security’ as it extended to a ‘part of Chinese territorial waters
in the vicinity of China’s Hsisha (Paracel) islands’. |
H
Chiu, ‘China and the Law of the Sea Conference’, Contemporary Asian Studies,
41(4), 1981, p. 4. |
August
1967 |
The
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) was established, with
Indonesia, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines constituting
its founding members. The PRC labelled it an ‘alliance of US stooges.’ |
Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade, ‘Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN)’
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial
Disputes: The Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, p.
63. |
1968 |
Almost
a year after the creation of its ‘Seabed’ Committee, the United Nations sponsored
a survey of natural resources in the South China Sea which revealed the presence
of a continental shelf and the possibility of oil reserves throughout the
region. |
C
Snyder, ‘The implications of hydrocarbon development in the
South China Sea’, International Journal, 52(1), 1996-7, p. 143. |
1971 |
The
PRC began construction of a harbour and concrete wharf on Woody Island, a
feature in the Paracel Islands.
|
J Garver, ‘China’s Push through the South China Sea: The
Interaction of Bureaucratic and National Interests’, The China Quarterly, 132, 1992,
p. 1001. |
July
1971 |
Henry
Kissinger secretly visited China, leading to a rapprochement between the PRC
and the US. It also contributed to a terminal decline in relations between
the PRC and North Vietnam in light of the parties’ involvement in the Vietnam
War. |
W Burr, ‘The Kissinger Transcripts: The Top
Secret Talks With Beijing and Moscow’, The New York Times (online archive), 1999.
|
March
1972 |
The
PRC representative on the UN Seabed Committee argued in favour of a 200-mile
territorial sea, over which the claimant nation would exercise ‘complete
sovereignty’. |
H
Chiu, ‘China and the Law of the Sea Conference’, Contemporary Asian Studies,
41(4), 1981, pp. 6-7. |
1973 |
The
PRC presented its contemporary views on maritime territorial law through a
submission to the UN Seabed Committee which stated that ‘an Archipelago or an
island chain consisting of islands close to each other may be taken as an
integral whole in defining the limits of the territorial sea around it’,
presumably in reference to the Paracel and Spratly Islands. Outside of the
ambiguity of the nine-dash line, the PRC had previously restricted its
statements on the international stage to claims to sovereignty over islands,
rather than substantial territorial claims over the South China Sea itself. |
H
Chiu, ‘China and the Law of the Sea Conference’, Contemporary Asian Studies, 41(4),
1981, p. 9. |
July
1973 |
South
Vietnam granted several oil concessions off its coast to various
international oil companies and consortia. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, p.
55. |
September
1973 |
In
line with a recommendation of its petroleum board, South Vietnam occupied ten
of the Spratly Islands and incorporated them into the Phước Tuy
Province. Which state held sovereignty over the Spratly Islands had been
disputed since the Treaty of Peace with Japan. Hundreds of South Vietnamese
troops were deployed to protect the oil concessions South Vietnam had
granted. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2014, p. 71.
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989,
p. 55. |
January
1974 |
South
Vietnamese forces were decisively driven from the Paracel Islands by People's
Liberation Army (PLA) naval vessels and soldiers. Over 100 South Vietnamese
soldiers were killed or wounded, and 48 taken prisoner. The remaining
Vietnamese troops fled south and, alongside reinforcements from the mainland,
established the first permanent Vietnamese occupation of the Spratly Islands,
drawing further ire from the PRC. |
T
Yoshihara, ‘The 1974 Paracels Sea Battle: A Campaign Appraisal’, U.S. Naval War College Review, 69(2),
2016, p. 50.
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, pp.
55-58.
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, pp. 78-79. |
January
– February 1974 |
South
Vietnam sent diplomatic notes to the ROC and the Philippines rejecting their
claims to sovereignty over the Spratly Islands. |
R
Pedrozo, China Versus Vietnam: An Analysis of the Competing
Claims in the South China Sea, CNA Occasional Paper, CNA Corporation, August 2014, p.
58. |
October
1974 |
The
Philippine Government coerced Tomás Cloma into giving them control of Freedomland
and renames it the Kalyaan islands. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, pp. 69-70. |
April
1975 |
In
the weeks before the fall of Saigon, North Vietnamese forces occupied six of
the Spratly Islands previously under South Vietnamese control. The state news
agency described the action as the return of ‘six beloved islands to the
fatherland’. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, 1989, p.
92. |
April
1975 |
Saigon
(Ho Chi Minh City) fell to North Vietnamese Forces, beginning the process of reunification. |
G
Esper, ‘Communists Take Over Saigon; ‘Ho Chi
Minh City’’, The New York Times (online archive), 1 May 1975. |
March
1976 |
Notwithstanding
the protests of the PRC, a Philippine-Swedish consortium conducted a
resources survey in the Reed Bank area of the Spratlys and discovered a rich
oil field off the coast of Palawan Island. |
M
Muscolino, ‘Past and Present Resource Disputes in the South
China Sea: The Case of Reed Bank’, Cross-Currents East Asian History and Culture
Review, 2(2), September 2013, p. 85. |
May
1977 |
Vietnam
released a statement claiming sovereignty over the Paracel and Spratly
Islands, as well as the territorial sea and resources surrounding them. |
Statement on the Territorial Sea, the Contiguous
Zone, the Exclusive Economic Zone and the Continental Shelf, May 1977. |
June
1977 |
The
Vietnamese Defence Minister ordered a 29-vessel taskforce to conduct a
combined sea-air exercise near the Paracel Islands the day before he was to
visit China. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, p. 101. |
1978 |
At
the Third Plenum of the 11th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist
Party, Deng Xiaoping is established as paramount leader. During Deng’s time
as leader, China’s diplomatic relations with the West improved, and Chinese
ties with ASEAN members grew closer, with the exception of Vietnam. |
B
Naughton, ‘Deng Xiaoping: The Economist’, The China Quarterly, 135,
September 1993, p. 500.
W
Heaton, ‘China and Southeast Asian Communist
Movements: The Decline of Dual Track Diplomacy’ Asian Survey, 22(8), August 1982,
pp. 779-781. |
1978 |
The
PRC completed construction of a runway on Woody Island and enlarged its
harbour. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 79. |
1978 |
As
part of its efforts to increase its military presence in the Spratlys, the Philippines
occupied Panata Island. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, p.
150. |
June
1978 |
President
of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos, signed a Presidential decree claiming
sovereignty over the Kalayaan island group. The PRC Foreign Ministry later denounced
the move as ‘illegal and impermissible’. |
Presidential Decree No. 1596, s. 1978, 11 June 1978.
|
February
1979 |
Following
Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia, and allegations that Chinese people living
in the nation had been mistreated or killed, the PRC launched a punitive
expedition against Vietnam, which sparked a war between the two nations which
killed tens of thousands. |
J
Copper, The Sino-Vietnam War’s Thirtieth Anniversary, American Journal of Chinese Studies, 16(1),
2009. |
September
1979 |
During bilateral talks between China and
Vietnam, the Vietnamese Government published ‘Vietnam’s Sovereignty Over Hoàng
Sa (Paracel) and Trường Sa (Spratly) Archipelagos’. This
represented a definitive departure from the previous North Vietnamese
position that the PRC held sovereignty over the Paracel and Spratly Islands. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, p.
113. |
December
1979 |
Malaysia
published a map of its continental shelf, marking several islands and reefs
in the Spratly Islands as its territory. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, p.
156. |
1979
– 1980 |
The
PRC established temporary and permanent navigation beacons and lighthouses in
the Paracel islands. It also built its first airstrip in the island group,
establishing an air route to Hainan Island, and expanded the harbours on
Woody Island and Triton Island. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The
Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, pp.
115 & 118. |
January
1980 |
The
PRC foreign Ministry published ‘China’s Indisputable Sovereignty over the
Xisha (Paracel) and Nansha (Spratly) Islands’, a document which stated that
the islands have been ‘China’s territory since ancient times’ and denounced
the allegedly ‘hegemonist and aggressor expansionist ambitions’ of Vietnam in
the South China Sea. |
PRC
Foreign Ministry, ‘China’s Indisputable Sovereignty Over the Xisha and
Nansha Islands (PRC)’, Beijing Review, 7, 18 February 1980, pp. 15 & 24.
|
1981 |
The
PRC announced that ‘quite abundant’ offshore oil reserves have been
discovered following extensive surveys in the Pearl River Estuary, the Yingge
Sea, and the Northern part of the Tonkin Gulf, all regions which are part of
or directly adjacent to the South China Sea. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The Case
of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, p. 126. |
1982 |
After
the PRC advertised oil concessions in the South China, the Vietnamese
Government released a statement asserting that it will ‘not tolerate any
encroachment on the resources held in its territorial waters and continental
shelf’. |
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The Case
of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, p. 130. |
1982
December |
United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) was opened for signatures.
This treaty lays down a comprehensive regime of law and order in the world's
oceans and seas establishing rules governing all uses of the oceans and their
resources. It also contradicted China’s 1973 working paper by limiting the application
of the archipelagic principle to archipelago states. |
United Nations Convention on the Law of
the Sea, opened
for signature 10 December 1982.
L
Chi-Kin, China’s Policy Towards Territorial
Disputes: The Case of the South China Sea Islands, Routledge, London and New York, pp.
40-41. |
1983 |
Malaysia
occupied and established a base on Swallow Reef, which is located in the
southern part of the Spratly Islands. |
Asian
Maritime Transparency Initiative, ‘Swallow
Reef’, Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative Website. |
1984 |
As
it became an independent country, Brunei formally laid claim to its
continental shelf and EEZ, which extends 200 miles from its coastline. This
encompassed several features in the Southern Spratly islands, including Louisa
Reef, Owen Shoal and Rifleman Bank. |
Exclusive Economic Zone Proclaimation, Brunei Darussalam, 1984.
Editorial Board, ‘Brunei Maintains a Low Profile in Pressing its South
China Sea Claims’, World
Politics Review (online), 28 January 2016.
|
1984 |
Following
years of build-up of the country’s naval capacity, PRC ships conducted their
own surveys of Spratly Islands which covered most of the region. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 80. |
May
1984 |
Philippines
ratified UNCLOS. |
United
Nations (UN), ‘Chronological lists of ratifications of,
accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements’, UN Oceans & Law of the Sea
website. |
1986 |
Malaysia
constructed a runway and civilian resort on Swallow Reef. |
Asian
Maritime Transparency Initiative, ‘Airpower
in the South China Sea’, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative Website. |
February
1986 |
Indonesia
ratified UNCLOS. |
United
Nations (UN), ‘Chronological lists of ratifications of,
accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements’, UN Oceans & Law of the Sea
website. |
January
- March 1988 |
The
PRC permanently occupied Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratly Islands after
dredging to create a feature measuring approximately 8000m2 on the
previously intermittently submerged feature. It also occupied Cuarteron Reef,
which was claimed by the Vietnamese. Previously, Vietnam was the only country
occupying islands in this part of the Spratlys. |
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, p. 82.
B
Hayton, ‘Why China Built its New Islands’ in A Corr, ed, Great Powers,
Grand Strategies: The New Game in the South China Sea, Naval Institute
Press, Annapolis, Maryland, pp. 48-49. |
March
1988 |
A
skirmish between Vietnamese and Chinese forces over control of Johnson South Reef
in the Spratly Islands resulted in the deaths of 64 Vietnamese sailors. |
KSL
Collin, NM Tri, ‘Learning From the Battle of the Spratly Islands’, The Diplomat (online edition),
March 20 2018. |
April
1988 |
The
PRC occupied the Hughes, North and South Gavan, and Subi reefs near Fiery
Cross Reef and Johnson Reef. |
B
Hayton, ‘Why China Built its New Islands’, in A Corr, ed, Great Powers,
Grand Strategies: The New Game in the South China Sea, Naval Institute
Press, Annapolis, Maryland, pp. 48-49. |
September
1991 |
The
Philippine Government evicted United States forces from United States bases
in the Philippines. |
D
Sanger, ‘Philippines Orders U.S. to Leave
Strategic Navy Base at Subic Bay’, The New York Times (online edition), 28 December
1991. |
1992 |
Through
a declaration by its Foreign Ministry, Brunei formally laid claim to Louisa
Reef. |
The
Maritime Awareness Project, ‘Brunei
Country Profile’,
The National Bureau of Asian Research, accessed 1 July 2021. |
February
1992 |
The
PRC passed its Law on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Zone, laying claim
to almost the entire South China Sea based on its purported historical
rights. |
Law of the People’s Republic of China on the
Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone, February 1992 |
July
1994 |
Vietnam
ratified UNCLOS. |
United
Nations (UN), ‘Chronological lists of ratifications of,
accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements’, UN Oceans & Law of the Sea
website. |
1995 |
PRC
forces permanently occupied Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands. The reef
was at this time a rock formation which was submerged at high tide. The Philippines
and other ASEAN members united to protest the action. |
Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative, ‘Mischief
Reef’, Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative website.
B
Hayton, The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Asia, Yale University Press, New Haven and
London, 2014, pp. 85-86.
Anon,
‘Scraply Islands’, The Economist, 343(8018), 24
May 1997, pp. 39-40. |
January
1996 |
PRC
naval vessels fought a battle with a Philippine navy gunboat near Capones
Island in Mischief Reef, which was claimed by both the Philippines and the
PRC. This was the first time the PRC engaged in military confrontation with
an ASEAN member other than Vietnam. |
A Rustandi, The South China Sea Dispute: Opportunities for ASEAN
to enhance its policies in order to achieve resolution, Australian Defence College, Centre for
Defence and Strategic Studies, April 2016, p. 5. |
March
1996 |
The
US and the Philippines carried out joint military exercises on Palawan Island.
Both countries denied that the operation was a reaction to the PRC’s seizure
of Mischief Reef. |
R
De Castro, ‘The US-Philippine Alliance: An Evolving Hedge
Against an Emerging China Challenge’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, 31(3), 2009, p.
405. |
June
1996 |
The
PRC ratified UNCLOS. However, the PRC continued to oppose treaty’s
requirement that parties undergo mandatory arbitration where there are
disputes, and otherwise rejected third party involvement in such matters. |
I Kardon, ‘China Can Say ‘No’: Analysing China’s Rejection
of the South China Sea Arbitration’, Asian Law Review, 13(2), 2018, pp.
10-11.
United
Nations (UN), ‘Chronological lists of ratifications of,
accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements’, UN Oceans & Law of the Sea
website. |
October
1996 |
Malaysia
ratified UNCLOS. |
United
Nations (UN), ‘Chronological lists of ratifications of,
accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements’, UN Oceans & Law of the Sea
website. |
September
1996 |
Indonesia
held its largest naval manoeuvres to date around the Natuna Islands, to which
the PRC had made claims. |
M
Richardson, ‘Indonesia Plans War Games to Caution China’, The New York Times, 16 August 1996. |
November
1996 |
Brunei
ratified UNCLOS. |
United
Nations (UN), ‘Chronological lists of ratifications of,
accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements’, UN Oceans & Law of the Sea
website. |
October
1998 |
The
Philippines Government produced photographs of PRC vessels unloading
construction materials onto Mischief Reef, and Chinese workers building a
large structure. |
I
Storey, ‘Creeping Assertiveness: China, the Philippines and
the South China Sea Dispute’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, 21(1), April 1999, p. 98. |
1999 |
The
PRC summer fishing moratoria which had previously been applied to the East
Sea and Yellow Sea were extended to the South China Sea. The moratoria applied
to the area north of 12 parallel north, which overlapped with traditional
Vietnamese and Philippines fisheries. Fishermen in violation of the restrictions
would have their vessels and catch confiscated and faced a 50,000 fine. While
Vietnam has explicitly and repeatedly rejected the ban, the Philippines have passed
fishing regulations that largely mirror those imposed by the PRC. |
S
Huang & Yuru He, ‘Management of China’s capture fisheries: Review and
prospect’, Aquaculture
and Fisheries, 4, 2019, p. 178.
V
Macikenaite, ‘The Implications of China’s Fisheries Industry
Regulation and Development for the South China Sea Dispute’, Keio University, 2014, pp. 221-223. |
2000 |
The
PRC and Vietnam signed a bilateral treaty which formally delimited the
boundary between the two countries’ territory, EEZs and continental shelves
in the northern part of the Tonkin Gulf, and concluded a joint fishing agreement
which applied to the area. The preceding negotiations had begun before either
party had ratified UNCLOS, but were nonetheless guided by its provisions. |
I
Kardon, ‘The Other Gulf of Tonkin Incident: China’s Forgotten
Maritime Compromise’, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative Website, 21 October
2015. |
April
2001 |
A
US EP-3E spy plane was intercepted by a Chinese F-8 fighter over the South
China Sea, 50 miles southeast of Hainan Island, resulting in a collision
which killed the Chinese pilot and forced the US plane to make an emergency
landing on the island. |
E
Rosenthal and D Sanger, ‘U.S. Plane in China After it Collides With Chinese
Jet’, The New
York Times, 2 April 2001. |
November
2002 |
The
PRC and the member states of ASEAN signed the Declaration on the Conduct of
Parties in the South China Sea. The non-binding document affirmed the
intention of the parties to draft and ratify a formal Code of Conduct. |
Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South
China Sea,
opened for signature 4 November 2002. |
May
2007 |
The
first iteration of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), comprising Japan,
India, the United States of America, and Australia, met for the first time at
the suggestion of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan at the ASEAN Regional
Forum.
|
P Buchan and B
Rimland, Defining the Diamond: The Past, Present,
and Future of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, CSIS Brief, CSIS, March 2020. |
September
2007 |
The
first Quad held its only joint military exercise, an expanded ‘MALABAR’
exercise in the Bay of Bengal. The navies of the Quad countries were joined
by the Singaporean Navy. The PRC filed official protests with each of the
participating countries. |
J Cherian, ‘The battle is on’, Frontline, 21 September 2007.
K Kaushik, ‘Explained: The purpose, participants of
the Malabar Navy Exercise’, The Indian Express, 3 November 2020. |
January
– February 2008 |
ROC
completed construction of an airfield on Itu Aba (Taiping Island), and the
first visit to the island by an ROC President took place. |
CY Lin, ‘Taiwan’s Spratly Initiative in the South China Sea’, China Brief, 8(4), 29 February
2008.
|
2008 |
Following
disagreements over what role the Quad should play, the resignation of Shinzo
Abe after his first stint as PM, and the Rudd Government’s decision to
withdraw from the group, the first Quad disbanded. |
D Flitton, ‘Who Really Killed the Quad 1.0?’, The Interpreter, 2 June 2020. |
2009 |
Vietnam
established a ‘fishing militia’ as an answer to the maritime militia used by
the PRC to back up territorial claims. Like the PRC militia, it consists of
fishing vessels which swarm claimed territory, or engage foreign vessels. Its
mission, according to Hanoi, is to win the ongoing ‘people’s war at sea’. |
N Khac Giang, ‘Vietnam’s Response to China’s Militarised Fishing
Fleet’, East
Asia Forum, 4 August 2018.
D Grossman and N
Nhat Anh, ‘Deciphering Vietnam’s Evolving Military Doctrine in
the South China Sea’, The Rand Blog, 11 May 2018. |
May
2009 |
Malaysia
and Vietnam filed a joint submission to the UN Commission on the Limits of
the Continental Shelf to extend their continental shelves beyond the standard
200 nautical miles from their coastlines. |
Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf, submissions, 3 May 2011. |
July
2010 |
United
States of America Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reiterated Washington’s
neutrality regarding claims to sovereignty over islands in the South China
Sea in a speech at an Asian regional security meeting. However, she affirmed the
United States’s interest in maintaining ‘open access to Asia’s maritime
commons’. |
M Lander, ‘Offering to Aid Talks, U.S. Challenges China on
Disputed Islands’, New York Times, 23 July 2010. |
May
2011 |
Philippines
President Benigno Aquino III lodged a formal protest at the International
Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, alleging that Chinese patrol boats harassed
a Philippine oil surveying vessel in waters claimed by both nations. |
I Storey, ‘China and the Philippines: Implications of the Reed
Bank Incident’, China
Brief, 11(8), 6 May 2011. |
November
2011 |
In
his speech to the Australian Parliament, President Barack Obama announced
that the US will pivot geo-strategically to the Asia Pacific. He also
announced troop and equipment deployments to Australia, as well as Singapore. |
Commonwealth of
Australia. House of Representatives. (2011). Address by the President of the United States of
America. (Official
Hansard). |
February
2012 |
PRC
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei stated that ‘no country including China
has claimed sovereignty over the entire South China Sea’. |
M Fravel, ‘Clarification of China’s Claim?’, The Diplomat, March 2012. |
April
– June 2012 |
After
a Philippines reconnaissance plane identified Chinese fishing boats at
Scarborough Reef, the Philippine Navy sent its warship BRP Gregorio del Pilar
to detain or expel them. The PRC sent two unarmed vessels in response,
leading to a standoff. After a series of naval and diplomatic manoeuvres,
both sides withdrew. |
M Green, K
Hicks, Z Cooper, J Schaus and J Douglas, ‘Counter-Coercion Series: Scarborough Shoal Standoff‘, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative
Website. |
June
2012 |
Vietnam’s
National Assembly approved a new maritime law claiming sovereignty over the
Spratly and Paracel Islands. The PRC Foreign Ministry denounced the law,
asserting that the Paracel and Spratly Islands are the ‘indisputable’
territory of the PRC. |
Law of the Sea of Vietnam, (Vietnam)
J Perlez, ‘Vietnam Law on Contested Islands Draws China’s Ire’, New York Times, 21 June 2012. |
July
2012 |
ASEAN
failed to issue a communique for the first time in its 45-year history, due
to a disagreement between member states over whether to include the
territorial issue in the joint statement. The Philippines accused Cambodia of
obstructing the forum to aid the PRC. |
BBC, ‘ASEAN nations fail to reach agreement on
South China Sea’,
BBC News (online article), 13 July 2012. |
July
2012 |
The
PRC established Sansha City as part of the Hainan province. The city is
centred on Woody Island, where there is a significant civilian presence, and
its jurisdiction extends over most of the islands and features within the nine-dash
line. |
Z Haver, ‘Sansha and the Expansion of China’s South China Sea
Administration’,
Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative Website, 12 May 2020. |
November
2012 |
The
Chinese province of Hainan, which is directly to the North of the South China
Sea, received permission to stop and search vessels that enter waters claimed
by the PRC at its discretion. |
B Blanchard and
M Mogato, ‘Update 2 – Chinese police plan to board vessels in
disputed seas’, Reuters,
29 November 2012. |
2013 |
The
Vietnam Fisheries Resources Surveillance (VFRS) was established to supplement
the capabilities of the Vietnamese Coast Guard. The organisation is armed and
authorised to use force. |
N Khac Giang, ‘Vietnam’s Response to China’s Militarised Fishing
Fleet’, East
Asia Forum, 4 August 2018. |
January
2013 |
The
Philippines filed for formal arbitration of the PRC’s maritime claims in the
SCS under UNCLOS at the Permanent Court of Arbitration. The PRC rejected the
process. |
The
South China Sea Arbitration (The Republic of Philippines v. The People’s
Republic of China), (2013-2019). |
March
2013 |
A
PRC gunboat forced an Indonesian fisheries protection craft to release PRC
vessels found fishing near the Natuna Islands. The waters around the Natuna Islands
are internationally recognised as Indonesia’s EEZ. However, they also lie within
the nine-dash line, and therefore are claimed by the PRC. |
S Bentley, ‘Mapping the nine-dash line: recent incidents
involving Indonesia in the South China Sea’, ASPI The Strategist, 29 October 2013. |
May
2013 |
The
PRC sent over thirty fishing and patrol vessels to Second Thomas Shoal, which
is occupied by the Philippines. The Philippines Government asserted that this
was done to intimidate their sailors and marines operating in the area. |
T Quismundo, ‘Withdraw ships, Philippines tells China’, Philippine Daily Inquirer, 28
May 2013. |
2014 |
Throughout
the year, PRC vessels harassed Vietnamese fishermen in the vicinity of the
Paracel Islands, and Philippines ships near Scarborough Shoal and Thomas
Shoal. Similar altercations continued into 2015. |
I Forsyth, ‘Old
Game Plan, New Game’, in A Corr, ed, Great Powers, Grand Strategies, Naval
Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland, p. 87. |
May
2014 |
A
Vietnamese fishing vessel sank near a Chinese oil rig anchored off Vietnam’s
coast, within its EEZ. Vietnamese media claimed that a Chinese vessel rammed
the boat, while Chinese state news agency Xinhua claimed that it capsized
while ‘interfering with and ramming’ a Chinese fishing vessel. |
J Perlez, ‘China and Vietnam Point Fingers After Clash in South
China Sea’, New York Times, 27 May
2014. |
August
2014 |
A
PRC fighter jet intercepted a US Navy P-8 Poseidon anti-submarine and
reconnaissance plane about 135 miles east of the Chinese island of Hainan. US
defence officials claim other close intercepts occurred in March, April and
May. |
Amaani Lyle, ‘DoD Registers Concern to China for Dangerous
Intercept’, US
Department of Defence Website, 22 August 2014. |
November
2014 |
PRC
President Xi Jinping addressed the Australian Parliament. He asserted that ‘China
remains committed to building friendly relations and partnerships with its neighbours’
and seeks to ‘jointly maintain freedom of navigation and safety of maritime routs
and ensure a maritime order of peace, tranquillity and win-win cooperation’. |
Commonwealth of
Australia. House of Representatives. (2014). Address by the President of the People’s Republic of
China. (Official
Hansard). |
2015 |
Vietnam
finished artificially doubling the size of its island base at Sand Cay and
constructing 65,000m2 of artificial land at West London Reef. |
Asia Maritime
Transparency Initiative, Vietnam Island Building, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative Website, May 7 2015. |
June
2015 |
The
PRC completed construction of seven artificial islands in the Spratly Islands
on reefs they occupy and announced that they would commence construction of
military and civilian structures on them. |
M Liddy & B
Spraggon, ‘Before and After: China Builds Artificial Islands in
South China Sea’,
ABC, 22 September 2015. |
September
2015 |
The
PRC completed a 3000m runway on Fiery Cross Reef, which can land most PRC
military aircraft. Runway construction was also spotted on artificially
reclaimed land on Mischief and Subi Reefs.
|
G Poling, ‘Spratly Airstrip Update: Is Mischief Reef Next’, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative,
15 September 2015. |
September
2015 |
In
response to concerns voiced by US President Barack Obama about China’s
construction activities in the Spratly Islands, President Xi Jinping asserted
that the PRC has ‘no intention to militarize’ the islands. |
D Brunnstrom
and M Martina, ‘China denies China turning artificial islands into
military bases’, Reuters, 26 September 2015. |
February
2016 |
According
to US and ROC sources, the PRC deployed surface to air missiles on Woody
Island. |
M Forsythe, ‘China Deployed Missiles on Disputed Island, U.S.
Says’, New
York Times, 16 February 2016. |
June
2016 |
ASEAN
foreign ministers meeting at Phnom Penh failed to issue a communique for the
second time. While the Philippines and Vietnam pushed for a statement which
would cite the South China Sea arbitration lodged by the Philippines under
UNCLOS, which was soon to announce its findings, Cambodia opposed any
statements which would challenge the PRC’s claims over the South China Sea. |
M Mogato, M
Martina, B Blanchard, ‘ASEAN Deadlocked on South China Sea, Cambodia Blocks
Statement’,
Reuters, 25 July 2016. |
July
2016 |
The
Permanent Court of Arbitration ruled in favour of the Philippines, finding
that the PRC's historic claims to sovereignty and jurisdiction over the
relevant waters or features within nine-dash line were contrary to UNCLOS, and
therefore unlawful to the extent that they exceed their entitlements under
UNCLOS. The PRC responded by stating that it ‘neither accepts nor recognises’
the court's ruling. The ROC also rejected the Court’s findings. |
The
South China Sea Arbitration (The Republic of Philippines v. The People’s
Republic of China, (2013-2019).
K Allen, ‘Beijing Engineers Coverage of South China Sea Ruling’, BBC, 12 July 2016. |
May
2017 |
The
PRC announced a three-month moratorium on fishing north of the 12th Parallel,
a month longer than previous moratoria. |
R Jennings, ‘Countries Defy China’s Extra-Strict Fishing
Moratorium in South China Sea’, VOA News, 9 June 2017. |
November
2017 |
Following
talks between representatives of the original Quad countries at the ASEAN
Conference in Manila, a second iteration of the Quad was formed. |
P Buchan & B Rimland, Defining the Diamond: The Past, Present,
and Future of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, CSIS Brief, 16 March 2020. |
March
2018 |
The
PRC placed its Coast Guard under the control of the People’s Armed Police,
which is itself directly commanded by the Central Military Commission. |
L Zhen, ‘China’s Military Police Given Control of Coast guard
as Beijing Boosts Maritime Security’, South China Morning Post, 21 March 2018. |
October
2018 |
The
navies of the PRC and ASEAN countries held their first ever maritime exercise
together off the coast of China’s Guangdong Province amid negotiations over a
draft negotiating text for a South China Sea Code of Conduct. This was the
first time ASEAN had held such an exercise with another country. |
A Liang, ‘South Asian Navies to Hold 1st Joint
Drills with China’,
Associated Press, 19 October 2018.
F Chiang, ‘Uncertain Prospects: South China Sea Code of Conduct
Negotiations’, Foreign
Policy Research Institute, 6 October 2020. |
September
2018 |
A
US warship on a freedom of navigation mission almost collided with a PRC
ship, which sparked a diplomatic incident. |
S Myers, ‘American and Chinese Warships Narrowly Avoid
High-Seas Collision’, The New York Times, 2 October 2018. |
November
2018 |
President
Xi Jinping visited Manila, the first state visit by a Chinese head of state
to the Philippines in 13 years. Beijing and Manila agreed to maintain ‘freedom
of navigation in and over-flight above the SCS’, and Duterte announced the
establishment of a no fishing zone and marine sanctuary at a lagoon in the
contested Scarborough Shoal. |
H Beech & J
Gutierrez, ‘Xi Visited Philippines to Celebrate ‘Rainbow After
the Rain’ With Duterte’, The New York Times, 19 November 2018.
Joint Statement between the People’s Republic of
China and the Republic of the Philippines, 21 November 2018.
M Ives, ‘Philippines to Declare Marine Sanctuary in South
China Sea’, The
New York Times, 21 November 2016. |
July
2019 |
Vietnamese
and PRC vessels engaged in a weeks-long standoff near an offshore oil block
in waters that fall within both Vietnam’s EEZ and the Nine-Dash Line. |
Reuters, ‘Vietnam, China embroiled in South China Sea Standoff’, Sydney Morning Herald, 18 July
2019. |
September
2019 |
The
reformed Quad held its first meeting of Foreign Ministers in New York.
Australia affirmed that the grouping is committed to an ‘open, prosperous,
rules-based and inclusive Indo-Pacific region, in which international law and
the rights of all states are respected’. |
E Fowler, ‘India Ramps Up Involvement in ‘Quad’ Talks’, Financial Review, 27 September
2019.
Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australia-India-Japan-United States
‘Quad’ Consultations, media release, 4 November 2019. |
January
2020 |
Chinese
fishing vessels were escorted by the PRC Coast Guard into Indonesia’s EEZ in
the North Natuna Sea. In response, Indonesia sent military patrols to the
region. The PRC vessels eventually retreated, an action which may have been
prompted by President Joko Widodo’s visit to the Natuna Regency. The PRC had previously
recognised Indonesia’s sovereignty over the Natuna Islands. |
A Darmawan, ‘China’s Claim to Traditional Fishing Rights in the
North Natuna Sea Does Not Hold Up’, East Asia Forum, 22 April 2020.
Fadli, ‘Chinese Vessels Retreat to Border of Indonesia’s EEZ
in North Natuna Sea’, The Jakarta Post, 12 January 2020.
M Yu, ‘Et Tu, Jakarta’, The Washington Times, 19
November 2015. |
April
2020 |
The
PRC announced the creation of two new administrative districts under the authority
of Sansha city: Xisha, which covers the Paracel Islands, Macclesfield Bank
and Scarborough Shoal, and Nansha, which covers the Spratly Islands. The move
was denounced by Vietnam and the Philippines. |
Huong Le Thu, ‘Fishing While the Water is Muddy: China’s Newly
Announced Administrative Districts in the South China Sea’, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative
Website, 6 May 2020.
Z Haver, ‘Sansha and the Expansion of China’s South China Sea
Administration’,
Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative Website, 12 May 2020. |
May
2020 |
A
months-long standoff between Chinese, Malaysian, and Vietnamese ships within
Malaysia’s EEZ ended after a Malaysian drillship which had been exploring oil
and gas fields claimed by both Vietnam and Malaysia left the area. |
Asia Maritime
Transparency Initiative, ‘Update: Chinese Survey Ship Escalates Three-Way
Standoff’, Asia
Maritime Transparency Initiative Website, 18 June 2020.
R Latiff, ‘Chinese Ship Leaves Malaysian Waters After
Month-Long South China Sea Standoff’, Reuters, 15 May 2020. |
July
2020 |
US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated that the PRC’s claims to sovereignty
across the entire South China Sea were ‘completely unlawful’. |
E Wong & M
Crowley, ‘U.S. Says Most of China’s Claims in the South China
Sea are Illegal’,
The New York Times, 13 July 2020. |
November
2020 |
For
the first time, all four members of the Quad participate in the MALABAR naval
exercises. |
Australia joins Exercise MALABAR 2020, Department of Defence, 3 November 2020 |
January
2021 |
The
PRC passed a law authorising Chinese Coast Guard vessels to ‘take all
necessary measures, including the use of weapons, when national sovereignty,
sovereign rights, and jurisdiction are being illegally infringed upon by
foreign organizations or individuals at sea’. |
S Luo, ‘China’s Coast Guard Law: Destabilizing or Reassuring’, The Diplomat, 29 January 2021.
M Yamaguchi, ‘Japan Expresses Concern to UK Over New Chinese Coast
Guard Law’, The
Diplomat, 4 February 2021. |
January
2021 |
Newly
appointed US Secretary of State Antony Blinken reaffirmed that the US ‘rejects
China’s maritime claims in the South China Sea to the extent that they exceed
the maritime zones that China is permitted to claim under international law’
and stated that he will ‘stand with Southeast Asian claimants in the face of
PRC pressure’. |
Reuters Staff, ‘U.S. Stands with SE Asian Countries Against China
Pressure’, Blinken Says’, Reuters, 28 January 2021. |
February
2021 |
The
Biden administration’s first FONOP begins, with a US warship sailing past the
Paracel Islands. |
A Panda, The US Navy’s First Trump-Era South China Sea FONOP
Just Happened: First Takeaways and Analysis, The Diplomat, May 25 2017 |
March
2021 |
The
Philippine defence chief demanded that approximately 200 Chinese vessels
leave Whitsun Reef, which both the PRC and the Philippines claim. While a PRC
spokesperson asserted that the vessels carry Chinese fishermen who have been ‘fishing
in the waters near the reef all along’, the National Task Force–West
Philippines, an agency of the Philippines government, alleged they are part
of the PRC’s maritime militia. |
J Gomez, ‘Philippine defence chief asks Chinese flotilla to
leave reef’, Associated
Press, 22 March 2021.
S Myers & J
Gutierrez, ‘With Swarms of Ships, Beijing Tightens Its Grip on
South China Sea’, New York Times, 5 April 2021. |
March
2021 |
The
first Quad Leaders’ Summit is held virtually due to the Covid-19 pandemic. |
S Morrison, Opening remarks, Virtual Quad Leaders' Meeting, 13 March 2021 |
April
2021 |
All
27 EU member states issued a joint statement calling on all parties in the
South China Sea to abide by the 2016 Permanent Court of Arbitration ruling. |
South China Sea: Statement by the Spokesperson on
challenges to peace and stability, European Union External Action Service, 24 April 2021 |
June
2021 |
The
USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier strike group sailed into the disputed territory
of the South China Sea. |
US Navy aircraft carrier USS Reagan enters South
China Sea, Al
Jazeera, 15 June 2021 |
July
2021 |
UK
Carrier Strike Group, including the carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth, sailed
through the South China Sea on its way to Japan, with a program that included
exercises with the Singaporean navy and a FONOP exercise through the South
China Sea. |
China warns UK as carrier strike group approaches, BBC News, 30 July 2021 |
August
2021 |
A
German frigate is dispatched to the South China Sea for the first time, as
part of a German effort to expand its Indo-Pacific presence. |
Indo-Pacific Deployment 2021, Bundeswehr, 2 August 2021 |
September
2021
|
AUKUS,
an enhanced trilateral security partnership between Australia, the United
Kingdom and the United States of America, is formed. AUKUS’s first initiative
is the development of nuclear-powered submarines for the Royal Australian
Navy, beginning with an 18-month review period to determine how to achieve
this goal. Australia cancelled the Attack-class conventional submarine
acquisition program. |
Joint Leaders Statement on AUKUS, White House Briefing Room, September 15
2021
S Morrison, Australia to pursue nuclear-powered submarines
through new trilateral enhanced security partnership, Prime Minister, 16 September 2021 |
September
2021 |
The
first in-person Quad Leaders’ Summit was held at the White House in
Washington. |
S Morrison, Quad Leaders' Summit Communique, Prime Minister of Australia, 24
September 2021 |
October
2021 |
The
pace of Chinese air sorties into ROC airspace escalated, with 93 sorties conducted
within three days. |
L Lin and J T
Areddy, Record Chinese Aircraft Sorties Near Taiwan Prompt
US Warning,
Wall Street Journal, 3
October 2021 |
November
2021 |
The
Philippines claimed Chinese vessels fired water cannons on Philippine vessels
attempting to resupply the Sierra Madre grounded on the Second Thomas
Shoal. |
Philippines Tells China to Back Off After South
China Sea Clash,
Al Jazeera, 18 November 2021 |
February
2022 |
Australia
hosted fourth Quad Foreign Ministers’ meeting in Melbourne. |
Australia to host fourth Quad Foreign Ministers’
Meeting,
Minister for Foreign Affairs, 10 February 2022 |