Current International Situation in the South China Sea the Path to Confrontation?

  • Author: Karol Kościelniak
  • Institution: Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
  • Year of publication: 2013
  • Source: Show
  • Pages: 138-149
  • DOI Address: https://doi.org/10.15804/rop201308
  • PDF: rop/2013/rop201308.pdf

In recent years, the South China Sea area has become the arena of competition between the countries of Southeast Asia that set up claims to maritime areas and the islands, and, all the more, want to control and exploit what can be found under the seabed, namely the deposits of oil and gas. The situation in the area cannot even be resolved by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Montego Bay, 1982). Apart from the resources found in the sea and under the seabed, this body of water is an important shipping route, which makes it a strategically significant area for each of the countries located there, or those whose interests involve the South China Sea.
In this work, I describe the current situation in the waters of South China Sea: whether the countries bordering it strive for conflict or just secure their interests. It turns out each of the states will set up demands to the islands on this sea and especially to everything that lives in the sea and is to be found under the seabed. Minor, and also more significant incidents will happen, but it does not seem likely that any serious open conflict between the states of the region will break out in the close future. None of the countries pursues it and they do everything they can to maintain the status quo.

REFERENCES:

natural resources territorial disputes South China Sea Southeast Asia international law

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