Business Insider:
Since the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague ruled against China’s nine-dash line in the South China Sea, there has been a marked increase in rumblings of the unimaginable: War in the Pacific between China, it’s neighbors, and their ally, the US.
China had given signs that it hadno intention to respect the Hague’s ruling, but lately rhetoric has been stepped up a notch, with the AFP reporting that a Beijing minister urged preparations for a “people’s war at sea.”
In fact, China’s state-run media has been awash with bluster on the subject of their military and sovereignty. China’s Global Times went as far as to challenge Australia directly, saying: “If Australia steps into the South China Sea waters, it will be an ideal target for China to warn and strike.”
On Weibo, a state-regulated blogging site, Lian Fang, a professor at the military-run National Defense University said that, “The Chinese military will step up and fight hard and China will never submit to any country on matters of sovereignty,” Reuters reports.
Beijing has even gone as far as to unilaterally announce a “no sail zone” in international waters, which directly violates international maritime laws and courtesy.
This kind of unilateral action would undoubtedly prompt a response from the US, whose navy regularly patrols the waters of the South China Sea even as China builds up military outposts in the region.
Usually, regional powers are deterred from making power plays on international waters and shipping lanes by the deterrent factor of the US’s massive military, but Beijing seems emboldened by both their own rapidly advancing military might as well as the US’s preoccupation with the presidential election.
“The People’s Liberation Army is ready,” one source with ties to the military told Reuters.