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Home arrow Politics arrow Vietnam arrow China's "U-shaped Line" in the South China Sea
China's "U-shaped Line" in the South China Sea Print E-mail
Written by Duong Danh Huy   
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
 

The U-shaped line
The U-shaped line

China's four possible positions

China’s claims to the disputed islands in the South China Sea and their inclusion on a map that depicts a U-shaped line that comes perilously close to the coastal waters of the countries that abut the sea, have given rise to concern and debate about the line’s meaning. At stake are billions of dollars in fishing and mineral rights that all of the parties to the debate each claim as their own.

Although the dispute over the Paracels started as long ago as 1909 between China and colonial Vietnam, then represented by France, and that over the Spratlys started in the 1930s between France and Japan, the arguments over the maritime space beyond 12 nautical miles from these islands are relatively recent.

In the 1960s Indonesia and Malaysia began to make claims to the continental shelf in the southern part of the South China Sea and in 1969 the two countries signed a demarcation agreement. In 1971 the then Republic of Vietnam, i.e., South Vietnam, declared a continental shelf claim that overlapped with those of Malaysia and Indonesia.

China -- that is, the pre-1949 Kuomintang government -- advanced a claim to the Spratlys from the end of the Second World War, and published a map in 1948 showing the now-well-known U-shaped line. Although the area inside that line overlaps the continental shelf claims of Indonesia, Malaysia and South Vietnam, neither the People's Republic of China in Beijing nor the Nationalists now camped in Taipei objected to these claims, nor to the 1969 Indonesia-Malaysia agreement, nor did they advance any claims of their own.


In the 1990s, however, the government in Beijing started to protest against Vietnam’s oil and gas activities in the Nam Con Son and Vanguard Bank areas, and in 1992 it awarded an area of 25,000 sq km in the Vanguard Bank area to a US company. Since then, China’s words and actions in claiming maritime space far beyond 12 nautical miles from the disputed islands have been increasingly assertive.

In this context, China’s inclusion of a map that depicts the U-shaped line in unsigned diplomatic notes sent to the Commission on The Limit of the Continental Shelf in 2009, without explanation of the line’s meaning, has given rise to much discussion. Experts and diplomats ponder what China intends to claim inside that line and how China might use that line to support its claims.

Four potential meanings of the U-shaped line have been advanced and will be considered here.

Interpretations:

  1. China’s Foreign Ministry has stated that China claims the islands inside the U-shaped line. By international law, this would include the 12-nautical-mile territorial sea and any EXCLUSIVE ZONE and continental shelf that these islands generate. If this is all what China is claiming, with no implication that this line represents a claim to rights over maritime space right up to it, then this would be the most reasonable and legally valid interpretation of the U-shaped line. If the U-shaped line represents such claims, it is no more controversial than the claims to islands by other states. However, China has not stated that this is all what the U-shaped line represents.
  2. The government of the Republic of China (i.e., the Taiwan authorities), which is not recognized as a sovereign state, has described the area inside the U-shaped line as historical waters. This view is shared by some mainland scholars. However, international law has never recognized claims of historical waters that extend so far out to sea and cover such a vast area. In any case, there is no evidence that China has historically exercised sovereignty over the area enclosed by the U-shaped line. Therefore the interpretation of the area inside the U-shaped line as historical waters is overwhelmingly rejected by international law and evidence. Furthermore, given that historical waters are normally enclosed by baselines rather than lie outside them, such interpretation would be inconsistent with baseline declarations made by the PRC.
  3. China’s diplomatic note to the CLCS in 2009 in relation to Vietnam and Malaysia’s unilateral and joint CLCS submissions claim sovereignty over the “adjacent waters” of the islands in the South China Sea and sovereign rights and jurisdiction over “relevant waters as well as the seabed and subsoil thereof”, referring to a map on which the U-shaped line is depicted, but without declaring that this line demarcates any of these areas. In 2011, China submitted a further asserting that “China’s Nansha Islands is fully entitled to Territorial Sea, Exclusive Economic Zones and Continental Shelf”. These notes seem to support a third interpretation: that China intends to claim the area inside the U-shaped line as an exclusive zone and continental shelf generated by the disputed Paracels, Spratlys and Scarborough Reef. However, while this is a possible speculation, there has been no official statement from China to confirm it. Further, given that the U-shaped line for the most part lies closer to undisputed territories than to the disputed Paracels, Spratlys and Scarborough Reef, it would be impossible for China to justify it as a boundary for the exclusive zone and continental shelf generated by these features.
  4. Since China is not ready to settle for the first interpretation, and since the second and third are clearly indefensible under international law, in recent years Chinese scholars have advanced a fourth interpretation. According to this interpretation, China’s claims in the South China Sea are composed of three layers. In the first, China claims the disputed islands. In the second, it claims the exclusive zone and continental shelf generated by those islands, which might not extend as far as the U-shaped line. In the third layer, China claims “historic rights” over maritime space beyond 12 nautical miles from the islands, with the U-shaped line being either the limit or both the basis and the limit for this claim.

Historic rights derived from the U-shaped line?
The second and fourth interpretations differ in this respect: in the latter interpretation, the proponents do not claim that the “historic rights” in the third layer mean historic sovereignty, or that the area enclosed by the U-shaped line is historic waters. Instead, the proponents of this interpretation suggest that these “historic rights” are not absolute or exclusive, but entail the right to a share, perhaps even a preferential one, of the resources right up to the U-shaped line, even where the exclusive zone and continental shelf of the disputed islands fall short of this line.

By taking a step back from claiming historical water status and absolute sovereignty for the entire area enclosed by the U-shaped line, the proponents of the fourth interpretation appear to hope to avoid the indefensibility of the second interpretation, while allowing China to claim a share to the resources right up to the U-shaped line, something that would not be possible with the first interpretation.

For this fourth interpretation, i.e., the “historic rights” argument, to be valid, two conditions must be satisfied. First, China must have legally acquired historic rights over the maritime space beyond 12 nautical miles from the disputed features prior to the existence of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. Second, these historic rights must be of the types that are preserved by that convention.

Although the U-shaped line first appeared on its official maps in 1948, China has never declared that that line represents a claim to rights over maritime space for the area enclosed. In recent years, Beijing has studiously ignored calls on it to “clarify its claim.”

To date, therefore, the U-shaped line remains a line on the map with unspecified meaning and has never been officially advanced as a claim to rights over maritime space for the area enclosed. No rights over maritime space for the area enclosed, whether pre-UNCLOS or not, can be derived from a line that has never become a claim to such rights.

Even if, hypothetically, in 1948 China had declared that the U-shaped line represented a claim to rights over maritime space, that line lies too far from the disputed islands to be a legitimate claim to rights over maritime space under the law of the sea at that time. That line, therefore, could never have become a legitimate claim over maritime space, and it has never been recognized as such by any country.

What about other sources of historic rights?
If not the U-shaped line, then, can traditional fishing activities by Chinese fishermen be the basis for claims to historic rights over maritime space? It should be note that Chinese fishermen were by no means the only fishermen who traditionally fished in the South China Sea. Therefore, even if some historic rights could be derived from traditional fishing activities, China would not have a monopoly of these rights.

Additionally, in a case concerning the continental shelf of Libya and Tunisia, the International Court of Justice ruled that historic rights derived from traditional fishing activities stemmed from a legal regime distinct from that of the continental shelf and were not relevant. Therefore, while traditional fishing activities by the peoples around the South China Sea might give rise to a common fishing area through a political settlement, they do not provide the basis for claims against the continental shelf.

Can any other declarations or actions by China be the legal basis for claims to historic rights over maritime space? In practice, when Indonesia and Malaysia made claims to the continental shelf in the southern part of the South China Sea in the 1960s, when they signed a demarcation agreement in 1969, and when South Vietnam made a claim in this area in 1971, China did not protest these actions. It was not until the 1990s that China made its own claim to the continental shelf in this area. Therefore, in the southern part of the South China Sea, if anything, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam have pre-UNCLOS rights over the continental shelf beyond 12 nautical miles from the disputed islands, while China does not.

The most legally valid interpretation
Therefore, while it is true that some rights that a country acquired prior to UNCLOS over the maritime space between 12 and 200 nautical miles from its territory might affect the post-UNCLOS delimitation of areas of overlapping entitlements, this consideration is moot because it is highly questionable that China ever acquired such rights in the first place.

In conclusion, none of the three interpretations of the U-shape line as the basis or limit to claims to rights over the entire maritime space enclosed by it, namely, as a claim to historical waters, a claim to the exclusive zone and continental shelf, or a claim to historic rights over resources, has sufficient legal basis. The most legally valid and reasonable interpretation of the U-shaped line remains that of a claim only to the islands within that line.

The basis and extent of any subsequent claim to rights over maritime space should then be derived from the islands using UNCLOS and the international courts’ past rulings on maritime delimitation, and not from the U-shaped line.

(Duong Danh Huy is a physicist and resident of the United Kingdom whose whose avocation is international maritime law.)

Comments (6)Add Comment
0
Very good article for my students
written by Jacques de Goldfiem, September 19, 2012
Even if Duong Danh Huy seems to be from Vietnamese origine, I found this article very impartial. I totaly agree with him. That is what I say to my students for twenty years.
For them, I will archive this article in "China territorial claims" in THE NEW ASIA OBSERVER at www.asiaobserver.org
0
China acting badly ?
written by ultraman2, September 20, 2012
Excellent articles.

The Chinese claim appears excessive and unreasonable even from a lay person's point of view. The claim of the rights to specific islands/islets may be plausible but the entirety of the South China Sea, that is shear outrageous.

China should work with the neighbours amicably and build friendship instead of making enemies at her own door steps.

The value of this friendship may be so much more valuable than whatever is hidden below the waterline of SCS.

China's current action is myopic and foolish.

If China ever wishes to be a respected world power and make her claim of "PEACEFUL RISE" and "HARMONIOUS CO-EXISTENCE" believeable, then China should understand that there are more important issues other than territorial claim and the need to build consensus, cooperation hence prosperity. Perhaps China should take a leaf out of the US book of diplomacy (the good one I mean) and learn something.

One track mind and brutal unilateral action is unbecoming of a world power and again, there are a lot to learn from the US in that respect as well.


0
A Vietnamese PoV
written by Vietnam or Annam, September 20, 2012
The above article is careful word using HALF TRUTH to win a Point of View.

To me, it is just an OPINION. Not worth much in the real sense of LEGALITY! It is like Japan claiming those island they stole as an IMPERIALIST STATE in 1980's, Taiwan or South Korea.

From what we UNDERSTAND, Vietnamese Claims is almost IDENTICAL to those of PRC and why didn't Vietnam explained it.

How can UNCLOS a recent enacted agreement be used to undermine HISTORICAL CLAIM that is from 12 nautical miles to 200 nautical miles?

Vietnamese historical evidences are even FUNNIER as they were written in Chinese not forgetting that Vietnam or ANNAM was a Chinese Territories then.

At least PRC is forthcoming in presenting their real claim in the form of the U shape unlike those who choose to hid behind a wall of secrecy.
0
Dont Be Too Cocky Today
written by Cheng He, September 20, 2012
Just scroll down for the proofs -

http://english.cntv.cn/special/diaoyuchina/homapge/index.shtml

(1) Japanese ancient proofs?
(2) Japan shd learn from being nuked twice not once by the US.
(3) The karmic effect of the recent tsunami & 3rd self-nuke in Fukushima Daiichi
(4) China today is not a weak China of yesterday where there was civil war between the Koumintang & Communist.
(5) A new China straight from the revolution has checked the UN led by the US at the Yalu River, stopped stop of overrunning the capitals of New Delhi and Hanoi, withdrew unilaterally, after having taught a lesson.
(6) Japan has shown no remourse and repentance over the massacres of civilians especially innocent women and children in Harbin and Nanjing .
(7) The spirits of sex slaves from Korea as well are still crying out for justice like the Chinese.

Has Japan learnt? An eye for an eye, this vulnerable floating submarine will sink first before anything else.
0
cocky Cheng He
written by Christian Democrat, September 22, 2012
Commentor Cheng has funny reasoning.
For her point (2) - should China then not learn as well, from having not once, not twice, but many times lost the administration of a province to Japan ?
As for her point (5) - Revolutionary China did push the UN/US back from the Yalu, and ended the career of MacArthur. No Chinese army, though, was ever anywhere near New Delhi. It was the provincial capital of the North-east Frontier Agency (or South Tibet, or Arunachal Pradesh) that was so graciously retreated from (once the Cuban Missile Crisis was over and afforded no more distraction).
As for Hanoi, a national capital that was indeed the intended goal of Deng Xiaoping's bungled pro-Khmer-Rouge invasion, it was not much menaced.
0
...
written by urabus, September 22, 2012
Be real in this world those with bigger guns bigger money and bigger brain makes the rule.
China has them all and China had been very civilized through out history. China would never oppose
to work with small countries like Vietnam or Philippines but the problem is these countries liked to be fucked
by the western countries and been their dogs and go against China that irate China. Like Japan like to think they are white. Instead of helping Asians people with its advance technology they wanted to be a white so they became colonial master in Asia. Nothing wrong with China`s move - break the imperial and colonial
mentality and the system of enslave Asians for the advancement of western cultures. China has done an excellent job breaking up the old ways from the west. GO CHINA!

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