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tv   Mapped Out  Deutsche Welle  December 17, 2024 6:15pm-6:31pm CET

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a new test, and that's all for now of next month to have to add. hi vietnam and the philippines are responding to china's regression in the region. that's after a short break. don't forget to study more using information on our website and you can follow some social media pop up on in the us and bring in for me and the team here. thanks for watching. the can you see is what old cars tires have to do with the production? here's a hands on so really, you know, on youtube, china is pushing for dominance using access and
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running ships because it wants to control the south china sea, the philippines and getting them are threatened most by china submissions and both struggle to counter them. the rivalry between china and the united states also have a huge influence on this regional conflict. the philippines is getting closer to the us and the help this protects it from china. vietnam is balancing between the 2 superpowers. and this episode, we will look at how china is expanding its control in the self tennessee and how the philippine side of it ma'am, are pushing back in such different ways. the let's start with base chinese warships on patrol as shown by state media and
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sailors taking an oath to defend china. what's interesting about that is where they did it. here. 1600 kilometers from the chinese mainland provocation for others around these waters. the philippines, vietnam, malaysia for 9, indonesia and taiwan. because many of them have competing claims on these waters. looks confusing, right? well, it is. let's talk about china's claims because they're the biggest and beijing has the military muscle to make their claims a reality. vietnam and the philippines are most effective for decades, they've been slowly pushed aside and the struggle for control of the many islands and the sea ton of efforts have already paid off here. and the parasol islands
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facing, took full control in the 1970s, pushing out vietnam. now their focus is on this. bradley island china has been moving in here since the 1980s. this bradleys are basically dispute of bits of land rock or rates. so it's actually more important what's around them. the, the south china sea is a crucial maritime trade route. there an oil and gas reserves below the sea bass and rich fishing grounds and important food and income source. for many people living around here. china refers to it as the south sea, which is the basis for the english name used internationally. but for vietnam it's
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the e. c. and the philippines calls the waters close to the shores, the west philippine sea. so even the name of these waters is in dispute of the in recent years, china has managed to expand its dominance by occupying these features in the south china sea. so let's zoom in on one example, mist chipped reef. it also have different names in the philippines, china and vietnam, but we will stick with the international names. actually, the philippines have special rights here under international law. that's because states are entitled to explored natural resources, like fisheries and oil within 200 nautical miles of their coastline.
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it's called their exclusive economic zone. but china has its own interpretation. in the mid ninety's erected a number of hats here is claimed they were meant for chinese fishermen and ignored protests from the philippines. later bathing added concrete buildings in 2015 chinese dredging ships arrived. they took caro from the reese core, pulverized it, and titled it up to create an artificial island. so mister brief went from this to this the, today it's a chinese militarized outpost. there are thousands of hangers for fighter aircraft and underground fuel storage and a runway long enough for big military plains. the china built up more
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islands in a similar way for have airfields. now there combat aircraft cut stripe, most countries in the region. and how does china justify all that? after world war 2 vision published this map with dashes surrounding most of the south china seats, claiming it has historical rights to it. and kind of still uses a similar version of it today. a 9 dash line, like in this submission to the u. n. in 2009. and what about the military installations on the islands? well, china says they're not directed against its neighbors. i think the charter sort of tv chase. i mean, even though the, the non, they will come lazy and, and with deployment. so, oh, nice those i'm other agreements non duty. i seem to respond to the us new estimate warranty, which is this is who the director of the south china sea strategic
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situation, probing initiative. i think tank and beijing close to the chinese government. the us. he's more and more interference. the that's nice, unusual. how kind of things that i think make it's shawn or more them or do for the u. s. has no official position on who should control what in the sea, but it says it cares about freedom of navigation. here, the us us deployed ships and aircraft in the region in response to china's island build up. and both countries sometimes come dangerously close to each other. so that rivalry is growing here. and that is consequences for the main us ally in the region. the philippines, the,
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this is the moment the chinese coast guard member went at the crew of a filipino naval vessel. with an axe. this sailor says he lost his time in the incident. he was headed to a filipino outpost and dis, bradley islands. to this old navy ship, which might be the world's most unique military assignment. the sierra madre. the philippines ran into ground at the 2nd time a sho. in 1999 to crime control of the week. yes, they did that on purpose. and yes, since then the ship has basically been stuck. they are getting rusty or they say they did it to keep an eye on the ongoing chinese construction of mr. freeze, which is just 20 kilometers away. there are
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a few filipino military personnel living on the ground at vessel. the navy delivers food and material to repair the resting hawk and the china is trying to block the resupply efforts. so that's why we have recently seen so many stand ups here. the philippines is filming the encounters and blaming china publicly. that's part of the strategy experts college at transparency initiative or the transparency approach. calling out china is actions as in wendy, have been this is charmaine willoughby. she's an associate professor at the saw university in manila. and focuses on maritime security in southeast asia. this has so far been rather successful for the philippines because of hype from us. there's practically no other claim and states that calls china's
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actions out. and manila is confidence to confront. china stems from 2 things. first, the philippines to beijing, to the international court of arbitration. and one i still clearly remember the 12th of july in 2016. practically, everybody in the country was a, you know, celebrating because we, we realized that international law is actually behind us. that's when an international tribunal ruled that there was no legal basis for china of historical claims in the south china sea. china rejected that ruling for the 2nd reason for the philippines. confidence is their big ally, the us, their former colonial power. after independence,
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the 2 countries signed a mutual defense treaties. if the philippines was attacked, the u. s. should help defend them. given the growing tensions with china, the philippines is turning more strongly to the us. the country has given the us access to 9 military bases on its soil. they are part of the so called 1st island chain, a line of american military bases that the u. s. is using to project power close to china. one country being cautious about how close that gets to the us is vietnam. these are the outposts vietnam controls in the south china sea. one of them is bar canada, reese this is what it used to look like. and this is it in 2020, for enough space to fit
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a run way for long range military aircraft. so vietnam is kind of following china's playbook. the vin number has been ramping up its outposts a lot recently. so they're going to me saying that now maybe it's a good time for them to really scale up without attracting a lot of attention for on basically the end catch sign is a vietnam analyst. he works for a single poor state funded the think tank. the use of is check institute and he's based in australia. the focus is now on the page so that you try to read as quickly as possible before the denise will ship the attention to the numbers. in the past, china and vietnam have repeatedly clashed in the south china sea. right now,
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china isn't publicly pushing back against vietnam's island building. maybe because they're doing the same thing. and maybe because both countries, i governed by a communist party vietnam avoids publicly confronting china. and that restrain isn't only because of aging has a stronger military vietnam has a long land border with china. and china is its largest trade partner. so we have non is vulnerable. that's why it tries to strike a balance between china and the us. this is vietnam, making sure they're getting the exact same treatment during state visit. the vietnam's balancing act is called ben boot diplomacy. moving between july, you know, like a bamboo swing, a means of waiting, but not really lean on one side or the other. in practice,
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that means the country accepts security assistance including votes from the us. it's former war time. so. but then i'm also regularly conducts joint patrols with china close to their common border. but unlike the philippines, vin, i'm says it would not accept a foreign military presence on its soil or the part of the military alliance. gunam has been trying to walk a yearly tie live. they used to be upon a z z or political struggle between so it's you and in china and you're the states . and it's what's called up really badly, a meetings, a cold war. and i don't think it's a bit amazed literacy, one to really relieve that, that the experience any more china shows no signs of backing down the philippines and bip number have different strategies in dealing with beijing.
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the future of the us china rivalry will also shape the south china sea disputes and how the countries in the region will navigate these troubled waters. if you press the gas pedal here and so they'd be profound for. c the when it comes to electric cause this has got to be one of the more powerful but also more expensive ones. you can get the new audi.

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