The
U.S. is considering deploying aircraft and ships to contest Chinese
claims to disputed islands in the South China Sea, U.S. officials said
Wednesday.
Options are on the
table to fly surveillance aircraft and sail Navy ships nearby in a move
that puts the U.S. directly into a contentious territorial contest in
East Asia, in which, until now, the U.S. has avoided overtly taking
sides.
The South China Sea is the
subject of numerous rival -- often messy -- territorial claims, with
China, Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam disputing
sovereignty of several island chains and nearby waters.
China on Wednesday cautioned the U.S. against taking any actions that might be considered provocative, according to a report from the state-run Xinhua news service.
While
Beijing supports freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, the U.S.
must be careful in how it uses that right, Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in the report.
"Freedom
of navigation does not give one country's military aircraft and ships
free access to another country's territorial waters and airspace," Hua
is quoted as saying in the Xinhua report.

A
U.S. Navy statement Wednesday said the littoral combat ship USS Fort
Worth arrived for resupply in the Philippines after completing a
weeklong patrol in the South China Sea that took it near the disputed
Spratly Islands.
The Navy said it was the first time an
LCS, one of the newest vessels in the U.S. fleet, had operated in
international waters near the islands. The Spratlys have been claimed in
whole or in part by China, Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia,
according to the U.S. State Department.
"As
part of our strategic rebalance to bring our newest and most capable
Navy platforms to the Indo-Asia-Pacific, (the LCSs have) a regular
presence in Southeast Asia. Routine operations like the one Fort Worth
just completed in the South China Sea will be the new normal as we
welcome four LCSs to the region in the coming years," Capt. Fred Kacher,
commodore of the Navy's Destroyer Squadron 7, said in the Navy
release.
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