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Vietnamese Claims to
the Truong Sa Archipelago
Todd C. Kelly
Todd C. Kelly graduated from the M.A. program
in Asian Studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in August
1999.
There is a tide in the affairs of men[1]
On a string of mere flyspeck islands in the middle
of the high seas, the military forces of five nations stand arrayed
against one another, each prepared to do battle with the others.
The land these potential belligerents seek to control is barely
any land at all, but rather a group of tiny rocks, many of which
are frequently under water. No humans have ever settled there, and
for centuries the only nations that knew of their existence recognized
them primarily as a hazard to maritime navigation. How then did
this chain of islets, which the nations of Asia and the world considered
insignificant for so long, suddenly become so important that battles
have been fought over them and countries continue to risk war in
order to control the chain? The answers are as difficult to see
as are the Truong Sa Islands themselves at high tide.
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam is one of the six
nations[2] that has laid claim to the Truong Sa archipelago. While
all the claimant countries have publicly asserted that each should
be the legitimate and sole sovereign of all or part of the archipelago,
it is Vietnam that has been one of the most adamant in its claims
and that has taken assertive steps in attempting to establish its
control over the chain. Its willingness to go so far as to risk
war with the mighty People's Republic of China (PRC) is evidence
enough that the Truong Sa Islands are extremely important to Vietnam.
But why? What are the historical, political, legal, economic, and
strategic basis of Vietnam's sovereignty claims to the Truong Sa
archipelago, and why is control of these islands so important to
Hanoi?
This paper presents the arguments Vietnam has put
forth to substantiate its claims to the islands. It is not intended
to validate those arguments but merely to examine the Vietnamese
perspective on this issue. To that end, several primary sources--i.e.,
Vietnamese government documents--have been used for this study.
Since these sources are official position papers or policy statements
(White Papers) published by Hanoi, their objectivity may be questioned.
Whenever possible, information drawn from these documents will be
cross-referenced with non-Vietnamese academic works.
The majority of Vietnamese primary sources not only
argue Hanoi's case for sovereignty over the Truong Sa but also attempt
to refute the claims of other countries, particularly those of China.
This repeated countering of Chinese arguments is clearly a result
of Beijing's and Taiwan's actions regarding the archipelago, especially
in the latter half of this century; but these rebuttals are also
indicative of a larger adversarial issue: the historical relationship
between Vietnam and China.
The Context of the Dispute
The pasts of the Vietnamese and Chinese peoples have
been intertwined since their histories began. Indeed, the prevalent
theory about Vietnamese origins is that the original inhabitants
of northern Vietnam were descendants of the Yueh migration from
southern China. Despite these common beginnings, independent civilizations
developed during the Vietnamese pre-historical period, known as
Dong-song.
That independent relationship would eventually change,
however, at least for Vietnam (known as Van Lang until after 258
B.C.). Since the first Chinese conquest of the Vietnamese kingdom
by Trieu Da in 208 B.C.E., there have been at least four periods
when China occupied and ruled the 'land of the southern barbarians,'[3]
as well as countless other minor invasions and incursions into Vietnam.
This historical relationship produced a rather schizophrenic result:
generations of Chinese rule introduced technologies, traditions,
and advances--such as a written language--that had long-lasting
effects on Vietnamese civilization and served to foster closer ties
between the two peoples. Yet an independent and nationalistic spirit
survived among the people of Vietnam.
This Vietnamese identity, cognizant of its distinctiveness
from the Chinese identity, fueled resentment of outside rule and
manifested itself through recurring struggles against the perceived
occupation of Vietnam's territories by foreign powers--especially
China. When viewed through the context of this historical dynamic,
the dispute over the Truong Sa Islands appears as a microcosm of
the age-old conflict between these two neighbors. To see how this
is so, it is important to examine the islands themselves and their
role throughout history.
The Truong Sa Islands
The countries disputing the Truong Sa archipelago
can rarely find agreement on any issue relating to the island chain,
and this includes what to call the disputed islets. Therefore, a
brief discussion of the naming convention to be used in this analysis
is in order. Throughout this study, the Vietnamese names for the
archipelago and its features will be used except where quotation
material preclude such reference. Since Vietnam has yet to publish
a complete list of names for all the features of the Truong Sa archipelago,[4]
the English names will be used whenever there is no known Vietnamese
equivalent.
Located in the East Sea (called the South China Sea
outside of Vietnam), the Truong Sa archipelago is best known in
the West as the Spratly Islands. The area is also frequently referred
to as the "Dangerous Ground" because of its hazards to
maritime navigation. To both the PRC and the ROC (Republic of China,
Taiwan), the islands are known as the Nansha archipelago.
The islands claimed by the Philippines, which do
not include the entire Truong Sa archipelago, are called the Kalaya'an
Island Group by Manila.[5] While Malaysia maintains Malay names
for the islands and features it occupies, Kuala Lumpur's claims
also do not include the entire chain, and thus no attempt has been
made to rename the whole archipelago. Similarly, Brunei asserts
that it is entitled to sovereignty over only two reefs, not the
entire chain.[6]
The Truong Sa archipelago incorporates some five
actual islands, three cays, 26 reefs, 21 shoals, and ten banks.
Only 25 - 35 of these islets are known to be above water at low
tide.[7] The largest island in the chain is Dao Thai Binh (also
known as Dao Ba Binh), with a total area of .46 square kilometers
and a maximum elevation of about 15 feet[8] Truong Sa Island itself
is a mere 500 meters long by 300 meters wide with an above sea level
elevation of less than eight feet.[9]
Given the minuteness of the Truong Sa Islands, it
is not surprising that the archipelago has never supported any indigenous
or permanent human settlements apart from the military occupations
that began this century. However, the archipelago has been used
as a temporary encampment, primarily by fishers, for centuries.
In fact, when French naval forces took possession of the Truong
Sa Islands in 1933, Chinese fishermen were found on several of the
islets in the chain.[10] If no Vietnamese people are native to these
islands, then why does Vietnam claim that the archipelago is as
dear "to Vietnamese hearts . . . as could be any other part
of the fatherland"?[11] The answer lies in the historical relationship
between Vietnam and the Truong Sa chain.
"From Time Immemorial"[12]
While the Truong Sa Islands had been utilized for
centuries by fishers from various countries, especially from Vietnam
and China, the question remains as to which people first discovered
the archipelago. Most agree that the Chinese were probably the first
to find the islands,[13] although Vietnam contends that "not
only the Chinese, but also the Vietnamese, the Malays, the Persians,
the Arabs . . . made voyages to and from the waters of the . . .
Truong Sa," and that any of these groups could have "discovered"
the chain.[14] Vietnam has also declared that "even if it is
true that the Chinese discovered these archipelagos," Hanoi
will continue to refute China's claim because discovery alone does
"not constitute a legal basis for the Chinese claim that they
have been under Chinese jurisdiction."[15]
Regardless of which nation actually discovered the
islands, Vietnam maintains that it alone exercised the earliest
authority and control over the Truong Sa archipelago. Until the
17th century, no written documents existed to prove this assertion.
The first mention of Vietnamese exercise of sovereignty over the
island chain appears in an annotated atlas written between 1630
and 1653. Although a 17th century document, textual analysis--including
"historical references and linguistic style"--indicates
that this early contact with the islands actually began some 200
years earlier, under the reign of King Le Thanh Tong [1460 - 1497].[16]
It was during this period that the Vietnamese began to "organize
the exploitation" of both the Truong Sa and the Hoang Sa Archipelago
farther to the north.[17] This exploitation consisted of harvesting
"valuable sea-products" and conducting salvaging operations
to collect cargoes from vessels shipwrecked in the treacherous waters
of the Truong Sa.[18] Because of these state-sponsored economic
activities, the Le dynasty considered the archipelago to be part
of Vietnamese territory.[19]
This de facto sovereignty over the Truong Sa chain
is confirmed by European sources. Portuguese and Dutch maps drawn
by navigators in the early 17th century identify the islands as
Vietnamese.[20] It is important to note, however, that these early
maps identify the islands as the Pracel or Parcel archipelago and
locate them "in the middle of the East Sea, East [sic] of Vietnam,
off the Vietnamese coastal islands."[21] According to Vietnam,
the apparent error in positioning the islands was due to the relatively
primitive scientific and navigational technology of the time. In
addition, the Europeans grouped both the Truong Sa and Hoang Sa
archipelagoes together into a single island chain called the Paracels.[22]
This imprecision in differentiating the two archipelagoes is consistent
with Vietnamese records from the period. Until the 19th century,
both islands groups were known by the common name of Bai Cat Vong,
also sometimes referred to simply as "Hoang Sa."[23] Regardless
of the nomenclature differences, it was during the 17th century
that the Truong Sa were placed under the administration of the Binh
Son district within the Quang Nghia prefecture of Vietnam. Route
Maps from the Capital to the Four Directions by Do Ba Cong Dao provides
documentation of sovereignty over the Truong Sa archipelago, the
first Vietnamese documentation of formal exercise of authority over
the Truong Sa.[24]
Economic exploitation of Truong Sa resources continued
through the reign of the Nguyen Lords and their successors, the
Tay Son. Aside from harvesting the natural and man-made treasures
from these islands, the Vietnamese state also conducted geographical
and resource surveys in the archipelago. Descriptions of Bai Cat
Vang islands, sea products such as turtles and conch shells, and
references to foreign shipwrecks fare found in period documents
and surveys, including Miscellaneous Records on the Pacification
of the Frontiers written in 1776.[25]
State-sponsored occupation of the islands can also
be traced to the reign of the Nguyen lords. Salvaging operations
became formalized with the establishment of the Hoang Sa detachments
or brigades, units comprised of 70 men from the village of An Vinh,
the recruitment and organization of which were regulated by the
Vietnamese government. These units sailed each March to the Bai
Cat Vang island groups to retrieve shipwrecked goods and would normally
remain in the archipelago for up to six months each year. Descriptions
of these teams and their activities are found in documents dating
from the 1600s, which chronicle such operations into the Nguyen
Dynasty in the 19th century.[26] This annual occupation of the archipelagoes
is the first documented instance of state-organized physical sovereignty
over the Truong Sa.
During the reign of the Nguyen emperors, beginning
in 1802, documentation was produced that distinguished the Truong
Sa archipelago from the Hoang Sa Islands and identified both as
Vietnamese possessions. In 1836, emperor Minh Mang received a report
from his Ministry of Public Works that recommended a comprehensive
survey of all the East Sea islands because of their "great
strategic importance to our maritime borders."[27] The emperor
concurred. As a result of these exploration missions, Phan Huy Chu
published the "Detailed Map of the Dai Nam," circa 1838.
The map "expressly mentioned the Spratlys, under the name Van
Ly Truong Sa, as part of Vietnamese territory, although the archipelago
was not located at its proper place because of the use of ancient
geographic techniques."[28] It was also during these years
that European ships frequented the East Sea. With regard to the
Truong Sa chain, some European vessels "even made surveys and
designated names, as if discovering them for the first time."[29]
Nevertheless, the Nguyen dynasty continued to exercise jurisdiction
over the Truong Sa Islands without protest from any country until
the French protectorate was established over Vietnam in 1884.[30]
The French Colonial Era
On 6 June 1884, France consolidated her occupation
of Vietnam, which began in 1852, by forcing the Nguyen Dynasty to
sign the Patenotre Treaty.[31] Under terms of that agreement, France
was to represent Vietnam's interest in foreign affairs and was "bound
to protect Vietnam's sovereignty and territorial integrity."[32]
The French began to conduct patrol trips of the East Sea, especially
in the area of the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa islands in order "to
ensure security and committed customs ships to combating smuggling."[33]
French forces exercised further sovereignty over the Truong Sa archipelago
on behalf of Vietnam through a 1927 scientific survey of the islands,
which was conducted by the crew of the SS De Lanessan. A second
expedition to the islands was launched in 1930. During this mission
of the ship La Malicieuse , "the French flag was hoisted on
the highest point of an island called ile de la Tempete."[34]
The mission witnessed the first recorded instance of a sovereignty
marker placed on any Truong Sa features. It is interesting to note,
however, that the French found Chinese fishermen already present
on the island when they arrived but did not attempt to evict them.
In 1933, possibly with an eye toward an increasingly
militaristic Japan, the government of France decided to formalize
its jurisdiction over the Truong Sa Islands by taking physical possession
of the archipelago. Three ships, including the De Lanessan from
the original 1927 expedition, sailed to Truong Sa Island to officially
establish sovereignty. H. Cucherousset documented the act:
The three vessels first of all visited Spratly and
confirmed French possession by means of a document drawn up by the
Captains, and placed in a bottle which was subsequently embedded
in cement . . . . Then the Astrolabe sailed south west to a point
70 miles from Spratly and 200 miles from Borneo, and arrived at
the caye (sandy island) of Amboine, at the northern extremity of
the Bombay Castle Shallows. Possession was taken of the island in
the manner related above . . . . The Alerte for its part visited
the Thi-Thu reef, at about 20 miles north of the Loaita bank, and
took possession of an island and of this atoll, still by means of
the same ritual.[35]
In all, French forces took control of nine of the
major islands in the archipelago--including Dao Ba Binh, the largest
island in the group--during this expedition. On 26 July 1933 France
published an official "Notice concerning the occupation of
certain islands by French naval units." The notice listed the
features possessed by France and stated that the islands would "henceforth
come under French sovereignty."[36]
Today the Vietnamese government asserts that only
Japan protested the 1933 French sovereignty claims, but evidence
exists to support the Chinese position that their country had begun
to contest France's jurisdiction a year before. In September 1932
China sent a memorandum to the French government contesting France's
sovereignty over the Truong Sa. The argument was based on the Chinese
interpretation of the 1887 Sino-French Convention, which delineated
the boundary between Vietnam and China. According to the Convention,
a straight red line was drawn along the 108 degrees 3 minutes 13
seconds East longitude line from the mainland coast and extending
southward through the Bac Bo Gulf. "The Convention specifically
states that islands located to the east of this line belong to China
and islands lying west of it belong to Annam," but the terminus
of the red line was left undefined.[37] In his book The Sino-Vietnamese
Territorial Dispute, Pao-min Chang made this analysis of the red
line ambiguity:
To terminate it at the Vietnamese coast would confine
its applicability to the [Bac Bo] Gulf, or, in a more liberal sense,
to the entire sea area off Vietnam . . . the second interpretation
also allows one to apply the red line to all the islands in the
seas off Vietnam.[38]
It was the more liberal interpretation of the accords
that the Chinese adopted and which gave rise to their claim of sovereignty
over the Truong Sa. Following China's protest, France briefly engaged
in diplomacy over the issue with Peking, but the effort did not
produce a solution. Seven months later, the 1933 French expedition
to the Truong Sa Archipelago was launched amid continued Chinese
protests.[39]
Japan also disputed the 1933 French announcement,
citing historical evidence of phosphate mining in the Truong Sa
by private Japanese citizens.[40] The French authorities not only
rejected Tokyo's protest but went one step further by annexing the
major islands in the archipelago to Ba Ria Province on 21 December
1933. Continued scientific surveys of the archipelago and the construction
of a meteorological station on Dao Thai Binh Island furthered French
colonial control of the Truong Sa Islands.[41] The Dao Thai Binh
weather facility was listed by the World Meteorological Organization
as located in "Cochinchina" (French Vietnam).[42]
World War II and the "Germs of Discord"
On 4 April 1939, the Japanese government issued a
statement announcing its decision to "place the Spratly or
Tempest islands off the coast of Indochina under Japanese jurisdiction."[43]
The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs "protested energetically"
in response to the Japanese decree,[44] and France's European ally,
the United Kingdom, supported this protest. Three days after the
Japanese announcement, the British Foreign Under-secretary Butter
articulated his government's position that France exercised full
sovereignty over the Spratly archipelago and that "all matters
relevant to these islands were a French concern."[45] Tokyo
did not immediately move to enforce its sovereignty claim, and France
continued to exercise control over the islands through a resident
administrative officer and a guard detachment stationed on Dao Thai
Binh Island.[46] By 1941, however, Japan was in a position to forcibly
occupy the Truong Sa archipelago--and France was in no position
to stop it. Japanese troops landed on the islands that year and
remained in control of the archipelago until the end of the war.[47]
Under Japan's occupation of the Truong Sa chain,
the island of Dao Ba Binh became especially significant in Japanese
military operations in the East Sea and Island Southeast Asia. A
submarine base was established at the island, which became a staging
area to intercept Allied shipping.[48] Its proximity to the Philippine
Islands also made Dao Thai Binh an ideal "jumping-off point"
for the Japanese invasion of the Philippines.[49] Japan did not
restrict itself only to military control of the Truong Sa Archipelago,
however. For political administration, the island chain was incorporated
into the territory of Taiwan, which was then a Japanese possession.[50]
Both the ROC and the PRC have since pointed to this formalization
of Taiwanese (and thus Chinese) sovereignty over the Truong Sa group
to strengthen their claim to the islands.
Japanese control of the archipelago ended with their
defeat in 1945. Yet as the Empire of the Sun set, renewed controversies
rose over the Truong Sa. Both France and China articulated their
claims to the archipelago, and China sent troops to the Truong Sa
Islands for the first time. In response to the Chinese landing forces
and erecting sovereignty markers on Dao Ba Binh, France dispatched
warships on several occasions to the archipelago, beginning in November
1946.[51] The following year France demanded the withdrawal of all
Chinese troops from the East Sea islands but did not take any steps
to forcibly evict them from the archipelago.[52] Other events were
soon to preoccupy these two nations, as the Communists triumphed
in the Chinese Civil War and France began to lose control of her
colonies around the world. By 1948 France permanently ceased its
maritime patrols of the Truong Sa and all but a small contingent
of ROC troops departed the archipelago.[53]
The first post-war assertion of sovereignty by the
Vietnamese themselves came at the 1951 San Francisco Conference
on the Peace Treaty with Japan. On 7 July 1951 the head of the Vietnamese
delegation, Tran Van Huu, addressed the conference on the issue
of Truong Sa:
As we must frankly profit from all the opportunities
offered to us to stifle the germs of discord, we affirm our rights
to the Spratly and Paracel islands, which have always belonged to
Vietnam.[54]
This statement "met with no challenge or reservation
from any representative of the 51 nations at the conference."[55]
However, while not specifically protesting against the Vietnamese
declaration, the Soviet Union did introduce an amendment to the
Peace Treaty stating in part that "Japan recognizes full sovereignty
of the Chinese People's Republic over . . . the Spratly, and renounces
all right, title, and claim to the territories named herein."[56]
The amendment was defeated when it was ruled out of order, indicating
to Vietnam that "Chinese claims to the Paracels and Spratlys
were thus overwhelmingly disregarded."[57]
In the final peace treaty Japan renounced "all
right, title, and claim to the Spratly Islands," but the signed
document failed to specify to which country the islands were ceded.[58]
Vietnam chose to sign the treaty as it was without attempting to
clarify its sovereignty over the Truong Sa Islands; rather, Vietnam
let Tran's statement to the Conference suffice.[59] No further attempts
to exercise sovereignty over the islands were made by Vietnam until
1956, when a Filipino businessman made an announcement that surprised
all parties concerned.
The Plot Thickens
Director of the Maritime Institute of the Philippines
Tomas Cloma issued a "Proclamation to the Whole World"
on 15 May 1956. In it he claimed "ownership, by discovery and
occupation, of all the territory, 33 islands, sand cays, sand bars,
coral reefs and fishing grounds of 64,976 square nautical miles"
within the Truong Sa Archipelago.[60] Cloma called this portion
of the chain Kalaya'an or 'Freedomland,' and appointed himself the
Chair of the Supreme Council.[61]
This new claim spurred Vietnam and the Chinese to
action. Saigon, Beijing, and Taipei all reiterated their respective
sovereignty claims to the Truong Sa Islands and unanimously protested
the Filipino's actions. Furthermore, naval units from Vietnam and
the ROC were dispatched to the archipelago, precipitating mutual
Vietnamese and Chinese protests. Yet, though Vietnamese forces made
landings on Truong Sa Island, Vietnam established no permanent garrison
in the island group.[62] However, the Republic of Vietnam officially
annexed the entire Truong Sa Archipelago and placed it under the
administration of Phuoc Tuy Province on 22 October 1956.[63]
During this period, Saigon no longer spoke for all
of Vietnam. By late 1956, the country split into the communist Democratic
Republic of Vietnam (DRV) in the north and the pro-Western Republic
of Vietnam (RVN) in the south. As a fledgling communist state, the
DRV found itself allied with the PRC as "comrades and brothers."[64]
Therefore, in 1956, the DRV was placed in the uncomfortable position
of either deferring to its newfound Chinese friends and their claims
to the Truong Sa Islands or supporting the sovereignty claims of
a hostile RVN over a distant part of Vietnam. Hanoi chose to abdicate
its claim.
On 15 June 1956, two weeks after the RVN reiterated
the Vietnamese claims to the Truong Sa Islands, the DRV Second Foreign
Minister told the PRC Charge d'Affaires that "according to
Vietnamese data, the Xisha and Nansha Islands are historically part
of Chinese territory."[65] Two years later, the PRC made a
declaration defining its territorial waters. This declaration delineated
the extent of Chinese territory and included the Truong Sa. In response,
the DRV Prime Minister, Pham Van Dong, sent a formal note to PRC
Premier Zhou Enlai stating that "The Government of the Democratic
Republic of Viet Nam respects this decision."[66]
Despite the DRV's "abdication" of the islands,
the RVN continued to assert Vietnamese sovereignty over the archipelago
for the next two decades. Saigon's exercise of jurisdiction took
various forms, including the placement of sovereignty markers on
Truong Sa, An Bang, Song Tu Tay, and other major islands in the
chain from 1961 - 1963. Additional scientific surveys were conducted
on the islands in 1973.[67] Every time a country issued a claim
against the Truong Sa Islands, including the claims that issued
by Malaysia beginning in 1971), it was met with an official protest
from the RVN. Furthermore, several statements about Vietnam's legitimacy
of ownership of the archipelago were made to international organizations,
and the first White Paper--an official government statement of position
or policy--was issued after the PRC conquered the Hoang Sa Islands
in 1974.[68]
In 1976, Vietnam reunified as the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam. Within a year the new government reaffirmed its claim:
the Truong Sa archipelago belongs to Vietnam. But as the decade
drew to a close, new challenges to Vietnam's claim were beginning:
a 1978 Philippines Presidential Decree outlined Manila's claims
to the islands, and Malaysia published a map of its continental
shelf claim that encompasses 12 features of the Truong Sa chain
in 1979.[69] With outside claims mounting, Hanoi published a new
White Paper entitled Vietnam's Sovereignty over the Hoang Sa and
Truong Sa Archipelagos, which again outlined the Vietnamese position
and discounted the claims of disputing parties--in particular, those
of the PRC. Hanoi's and Beijing's attention was soon focused on
a different territorial dispute, however, as the two countries went
to war over their mutual land border on 17 February 1979.
Buildup to the Current Situation
By the early 1980's, the claimant countries to the
Truong Sa Islands began to feel that actions would speak louder
than words. Even while publishing another White Paper in 1982 to
further articulate its claims, Vietnam quietly began to occupy several
islets in the archipelago and to construct military installations,
including an airstrip upon Truong Sa Island.[70] Vietnam was not
alone. The Philippines occupied a half dozen features and constructed
a 5,500-foot landing strip on Dao Thi Tu. Malaysia also enforced
its claim by landing troops on Da Hua Lau in 1983.[71] Yet, despite
the military build-up in the islands, conflict did not appear imminent.
Then the PRC arrived. Beginning in 1985, Beijing
assumed a renewed interest in the archipelago that coincided with
its naval modernization program. By 1987, the PRC Navy began conducting
patrols in the waters of the Truong Sa and had even gone so far
as to stage a mock amphibious assault on one of the features. Alarmed
at this militaristic approach, Vietnam became warned Beijing that
such violations of Vietnamese sovereignty would carry "disastrous
consequences."[72] For its part, the PRC occupied and began
building its first permanent base on Da Chu Thap. Vietnam also continued
to occupy features throughout the chain, and by March 1988 Hanoi
had troops on 18 islets.[73]
Vietnam did not want to see a PRC base become operational
in the Truong Sa archipelago. Given its relative strength in the
islands, Hanoi decided that the time had come to stifle Beijing's
expansion in the East Sea. On 14 March 1988, the first and only
battle over Truong Sa sovereignty occurred. Disagreements exist
over which side initiated hostilities, but a gun battle began between
PRC and Vietnamese forces after the Chinese landed on Da Gac Ma.[74]
When the smoke cleared, three Vietnamese ships were ablaze, 70 Vietnamese
troops were dead, and the PRC emerged as victor.[75]
Vietnam did not back down, however. It deployed more
than 30 vessels to the Truong Sa archipelago, increased reconnaissance
flights over the islands, and occupied three more islets. Determined
to hold its ground, Hanoi "warned Beijing that in spite of
its massive economic woes, diplomatic isolation, and other internal
problems, Vietnam was not going to let the disputed islands go without
a fight."[76] This increased military assertiveness by the
Vietnamese continued for the remainder of the 1980s, with the Chief
of Vietnam's General Staff eventually visiting the archipelago to
commemorate the Socialist Republic's liberation of the Truong Sa
from the RVN in 1975. While on Dao Nam Yit, he pledged that his
country would defend the chain "by all means."[77] Despite
the increased tensions, no further fighting occurred.
Vietnam also continued to exercise sovereignty over
the islands through more diplomatic methods. A population survey
was conducted on the Vietnamese-controlled islets, presumably due
to increased civilian settlement in the archipelago. The first organized
fishing fleet was dispatched to the region to exploit the East Sea
fisheries in the region. Several civilian installations were also
constructed, including scientific stations and lighthouses.[78]
While the Vietnamese government continued to publicly
reiterate its sovereignty claims and refute all others, it also
entered into negotiations over the issue. Indonesia began sponsoring
a series of dialogues in the early 1990's to bring together all
claimants of the islands to discuss the issue for the first time.[79]
In addition Vietnam and the PRC entered into bilateral talks on
multiple occasions to discuss territorial disputes, including those
concerning the Truong Sa.[80] Today Hanoi continues to repeat its
call for "open talks for the settlement of differences concerning
the Truong Sa archipelago"[81] and has even indicated that
it would accept arbitration by the International Court of Justice
on the matter.[82] Despite these efforts, the normalization of relations
with the PRC in 1991, and Vietnam's admission to the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations in 1995, no agreement has been reached
over the islands.
Basis for the Vietnamese Claims
Clearly, Vietnam has had a long historical relationship
with the Truong Sa Islands. The Vietnamese history of occupation,
exploitation of resources, and administrative control over the archipelago
has its earliest recordings in the 1600's, but Vietnam's contact
with the chain likely began well before this documentation. This
centuries-old exercise of authority over the Truong Sa gives rise
to one of Hanoi's legal claims to the features under the principle
of terra nullius, or "land belonging to no state."[83]
According to international law, a state can occupy and therefore
own such territory, which is exactly what Vietnam claims it did
at least as far back as the 17th century: "The state of Vietnam
took effective possession of the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa archipelagoes
long ago when they were not under the sovereignty of any nation."[84]
Beyond simple occupation, Vietnam points to its historical
exercise of control and authority over the island chain. The first
recorded instance of this formal sovereignty was the placement of
the island group under the administrative authority of the Binh
Son district in the 1600's. The pre-colonial Vietnamese governments
continued to exercise the state's official, unchallenged control
of the archipelago for the next two hundred years. Even after France
took control of Vietnam by virtue of the 1887 Treaty, authority
over the Truong Sa was maintained and consolidated by the European
power on behalf of the Vietnamese state. The French annexation of
the islands to Vietnam provides a modern validation of Hanoi's administrative
sovereignty claims.[85]
After Japan renounced her claims to the islands following
World War II, the RVN further exercised sovereignty over the Truong
Sa through its claims to international organizations, protests against
assertions of foreign rights in the islands, occupation of the archipelago,
and the re-annexation of the chain in 1956. Saigon's heir, the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam, has continued to maintain Vietnamese sovereignty
to the point of military conflict to defend Hanoi's authority in
the Truong Sa Islands. This history of asserting and reinforcing
its claims lead the Vietnamese government to proclaim:
The state of Vietnam has always actively defended
its rights and titles against all schemes and acts of encroachment
upon the sovereignty, territorial integrity and interests of Vietnam
in connection with the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa archipelagoes.[86]
While Vietnam's history forms the basis for its claims
to the Truong Sa, it is the current situation in the archipelago
that strengthens Hanoi's case. Vietnam now occupies as many as 24
features, more than twice as many as any other claimant to the islands.[87]
At least five of these features have troops stationed on them, totaling
approximately "1,000 soldiers or sailors and some construction
workers," according to a 1992 Reuters report.[88] Such de facto
control often outweighs even the most convincing historical arguments.
One other basis for Vietnam's claims to the Truong
Sa derives from the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention. Article 76 of
that agreement is the internationally-accepted definition of the
continental shelf. Under terms of this Article, maritime nations
may claim exclusive economic zones at sea of up to 200 nautical
miles from their baseline shores. Further, such nations may "claim
the resources of . . . naturally-extending [continental] shelves
out to a maximum distance of 350 [nautical miles]."[89] Since
Vietnam believes the Truong Sa Islands do not generate either exclusive
economic zones nor continental shelves of their own, its position
is that the claimant states "should be entitled to a full 200-nautical-mile
exclusive economic zone generated from its main coastal or large-island
land areas, and that the high seas area beyond 200 [nautical miles]
should be governed by the International Sea-Bed Authority."[90]
Although such a claim places only a few of the Truong Sa Islands
within Vietnam's zone (and many of the eastern features in the zones
of other claimants, the Vietnamese still maintain their sovereignty
claims to the entire archipelago. Therefore, each of the islands
would still be Vietnamese--each with an accompanying 12 nautical
mile territorial water zone--regardless of the economic zone into
which they fell. Furthermore, Vietnam claims its 350 nautical mile
continental shelf extending southeastward from its mainland shore
toward the Truong Sa group. Vietnam is also not opposed to this
provision for other claimants, since the East Palawan Trough and
other sea floor geography do not justify the same continental shelf
claim toward the Truong Sa by Malaysia, Brunei, or the Philippines.
Vietnam's Interests
The Vietnamese have made it very clear that their
nation has a great deal of historical and legal justification for
its claims to the Truong Sa Islands. However, the question remains:
Is this group of tiny and apparently insignificant islets worth
the political effort, expenditure of resources, and the risk of
war with the PRC? What are Vietnam's interests in the archipelago?
The answer is as tangible as a barrel of oil and as nebulous as
a nation's psyche.
In the wake of the 1973 world oil crisis, the RVN
issued oil exploration permits to foreign corporations to survey
the East Sea, including the area near the Truong Sa Islands, for
potential undersea reserves.[91] In 1975, the first oil strike off
the Vietnamese coast was announced. For the next dozen years, speculation
over the potential for oil in the Truong Sa archipelago was rampant.
Yet it was not until November 1987 that any claim of oil discovery
surfaced. It was then that the PRC revealed that a survey had uncovered
rich oil and gas deposits in the Truong Sa area.[92]
The current view is that oil reserves in the Truong
Sa group is likely modest, but the geologic information is still
not sufficient for a comprehensive assessment. The PRC estimated
reserves of 225 billion barrels of oil equivalent in 1994, but a
Russian study the following year stated that the total was only
six billion barrels equivalent (70% of which would be natural gas).
Major oil companies are also pessimistic, though it is a common
tactic for petroleum corporations to downplay the size of new discoveries
in order to elicit more favorable exploitation contract terms. Regardless
of the size of the reserves, Vietnam hired VietSovpetro in 1994
to begin drilling in a region of the Truong Sa that the PRC had
conceded to the Crestone Corporation in 1992. Given the more recent
conservative assessments of oil reserves in the archipelago, Vietnam
may be less interested in black gold than in reasserting its authority,
and therefore claim, in the area and thwarting another PRC attempt
to exercise control.[93]
Oil is not the only resource the Truong Sa has to
offer. Natural gas reserves in the area are estimated at 0.1 - 1.0
trillion cubic feet, with a 1990 U.S. dollar value of $0.25 - $2.5
billion. As is evidenced by the archipelago's history, fishing has
traditionally been another area of economic potential for the Truong
Sa. A 1993 estimate put the total marine catch for the disputed
chain at 10.0 - 99.9 kilograms per kilometer.[94] Control of the
continental shelf and the archipelago itself would place Vietnam
in a prime position to exploit these resources.
Yet control of the resources beneath the East Sea
may not be as important as controlling the resources that pass through
it. Some of the world's most important commercial (as well as military)
sea lanes, or maritime routes, pass through the East Sea; Mark Valencia
has called the region "a nexus of maritime routes."[95]
Not only a great deal of Asia's trade, but also much of the entire
world's commerce travels along these sea lanes, including over 25%
of the world's crude oil, and in particular, the flow between the
Persian Gulf and Japan.[96] The ability to affect such vital economic
flows as these maritime routes creates a strategic empowerment for
any country that can disrupt or ensure this trade. Given Vietnam's
desire to expand its economy, maintaining the free flow of commerce
is within Hanoi's strategic interest. As one Vietnamese military
officer put it, "Security insurance at sea in the sense of
creating a stable environment for national . . . development [bears]
a long-term and pressing significance, particularly in the context
of countries [preparing] to step into the 21st century."[97]
Control of the Truong Sa archipelago by Vietnam would create a type
of "Strait of Vietnam" through which these sea lanes would
then pass.[98]
Commerce is only one consideration of the East Sea
maritime routes: the other is military significance. The world's
great powers all have national interests in the region's sea-lanes.
The United States Navy currently enjoys free and often discreet
access through the East Sea, which it uses to maintain a strong
military presence in this vital region. Until recently, Russia's
only warm-water naval base was at Cam Ranh Bay in Vietnam. Although
Soviet forces withdrew from the facility in 1991, there is evidence
that some military cooperation continues between the two,[99] possibly
even an informal basing rights agreement. If the Russian Navy were
to return to Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnamese control of the nearby Truong
Sa would allow Moscow to conduct military operations in the region
relatively free from the prying eyes of the PRC.[100] By the same
token, Beijing is extremely interested in disrupting the regional
military hegemony of the Moscow and Hanoi, as well as in denying
the Vietnamese any sphere of influence outside of its mainland territory.[101]
Vietnam is well aware of the PRC's desire for an increased presence
in (and therefore expanded influence over the affairs of) Southeast
Asia. Hanoi is also not keen on having what it sees as an enemy
establishing a military base on islands that have been used as a
staging area for military conquest in the past.[102]
However, denial of military use for East Sea islands
led Vietnam to the actions that most severely damaged its claims.
The apparent 1956 abdication of the Truong Sa to the PRC, and the
subsequent confirmation of this renunciation in 1958, seemed to
cede the islands to the Chinese. In 1988, the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam acknowledged that these statements had been made but
was quick to point out that "it is necessary to replace [these
statements] in their historical context."[103] In the document
The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes and International Law,
the Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs explained that the nation
was embroiled in a desperate war for survival when the statements
were made; therefore, what appeared to be a concession of the Truong
Sa to the PRC was actually just a strategic move to deny the United
States use of the archipelago and the East Sea. Hanoi believed that
any PRC sovereignty over the Truong Sa would be temporary: "Viet
Nam trusted China in all sincerity and believed that after the war
all territorial problems [between the two countries] would be suitably
resolved."[104] However, the re-establishment of diplomatic
relations with the U.S. in 1972 "resulted in China turning
friend into foe and vice-versa and in China's collusion with the
U.S. in its strategy against the Vietnamese people."[105] In
short, Vietnam never intended to permanently cede the Truong Sa
Islands to the PRC and since their alliance is over, Hanoi wants
the archipelago back.
The view of China as an enemy is not a new one. Throughout
Vietnamese history the two countries have gone to war on many occasions.
In fact, the period of DRV and PRC alliance from 1950 - 1976 was
more of an aberration than the norm. Despite the normalization of
relations between the two nations in 1991, an air of mistrust seems
to permeate Vietnam's interactions with the PRC--especially in the
Truong Sa dispute. Insight into the Vietnamese view of PRC's claims
to the Truong Sa Islands can be gained by examining the declarations
made in each Vietnamese White Paper. For example, the 1982 White
Paper states:
The ambition of the Peking authorities over the two
Vietnamese archipelagoes of Hoang Sa and Truong Sa manifests all
the more clearly their policy of big-nation expansionism and hegemony
which is aimed at conquering Vietnam as well as Laos and Kampuchea
gradually controlling and eventually turning the East Sea into a
Chinese Lake and using the Indochinese peninsula as a springboard
for their expansion into South East Asia.[106]
It is this age-old fear of Chinese conquest that
seemed to be confirmed in Vietnamese minds when their ally-turned-enemy
invaded Vietnam on 17 February 1979. The 1988 battle at Da Gac Ma
provided further evidence of Chinese expansionism. If an entire
people or a country as a whole can have a psyche or national mindset,
then the Vietnamese must have one of resolved defiance when it comes
to China. Especially in light of the loss of the Hoang Sa Islands
to PRC forces in 1974, it appears that the root of Vietnam's interest
in the Truong Sa is more than its historical ties, its legal rights,
or its strategic aspirations: it is also the desire to hold the
line against any more Chinese encroachment against Vietnam.
Conclusion
The Vietnamese have long been a sea-faring people;
even their ancient creation myths indicate as much of a maritime
orientation as a terrestrial one. Their sea voyages took them to
many lands, and the Truong Sa archipelago was likely one of these.
Whether the Vietnamese were the first to discover, administer, or
exploit the islands is open to debate, but the long Vietnamese relationship
with the Truong Sa chain is undeniable.
Vietnam has demonstrated that it does have historical
claims based on first occupation and ancient sovereignty, dating
back to the Hoang Sa brigades of the Nguyen Lords in the 17th century.
Assertions of that sovereignty occurred over the subsequent 300
years. Hanoi's legal claims are based on this historic exercise
of sovereignty and its current control of the majority of the archipelago.
Vietnam has demonstrated the political will to retain authority
over the islands through its diplomatic and physical defense of
the Truong Sa.
Yet the basis for the Vietnamese claims appears to
be a justification for a more practical, contemporary agenda of
maintaining regional political power and influence in the East Sea
as a counter to perceived Chinese expansion into Southeast Asia.
Given the long history of resistance to foreign occupation and the
adversarial relationship of the two--not to mention the 1979 invasion,
the proxy war in Cambodia, and the 1988 conflict in the Truong Sa
themselves--Vietnam's resolved defiance against China is not surprising.
Although Hanoi's claims also conflict with those of three fellow
ASEAN countries, it is the dispute with the Chinese that dominates
the Vietnamese government rhetoric. Despite Vietnam's offer to submit
the matter to the International Court of Justice and for multilateral
negotiations[107], the continued strength of the Vietnamese military
presence in the Truong Sa is evidence that Hanoi is not willing
to simply surrender what it considers to be historic territory.
Vietnam is thus sure to maintain its claims to and influence over
the islands--as sure as the tide washes over a string of sandy cays
and reefs, somewhere in the East Sea.
Notes
1 William Shakespeare,The Tragedy of Julius Caesar
(Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1969), 128.
2 The other claimants are the People's Republic of
China (PRC), the Republic of China (ROC), the Philippines, Malaysia,
and Brunei, which is the only claimant state that does not have
militarily occupied any of the islands or features.
3 The Chinese name for Vietnam, the characters for
which continue to be used today. Steven J. Hood,Dragons Entangled:
Indo-China and the China-Vietnam War (Armonk, New York: Sharpe,
1992), 5; 161.
4 Pao-min Chang,The Sino-Vietnamese Territorial Dispute
(New York: Praeger Publishers, 1986), 111.
5 Mark J. Valencia et al.,Sharing the Resources of
the South China Sea (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1997),
33-34.
6 Valencia, 38.
7 Valencia, 5.
8 Valencia., 230.
9 Hungdah Chiu and Choon-ho Park, "Legal Status,"Ocean
Development and International Law. 3. 1 (Spring 1975): 23 [note
16] and Valencia, 232.
10 Valencia, 67 [note 120] and Chiu and Park, 8.
11 Republic of Vietnam, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,White
Paper on the Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) Islands
(Saigon: 1975). 7.
12Vietnam's Sovereignty Over the Hoang Sa and Truong
Sa Archipelagos (Hanoi: Socialist Republic of Vietnam, Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, 1979), 1. The full quotation from this White
Book is: "Both Hoang Sa and Truong Sa have, from time immemorial,
been part of Vietnam's territory."
13 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 16.
14The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagos and International
Law (Hanoi: Socialist Republic of Vietnam, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
1988). Excerpts reprinted as "Vietnam Stands for a Peaceful
Settlement of the Dispute with China Over the Truong Sa and Hoang
Sa Archipelagos,"Vietnam Courier 1988, no. 7: 11. The point
is a valid one; however, it is likely that the Chinese were the
most frequent visitors to the islands in ancient times.
15The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories (Hanoi: Socialist Republic of Vietnam, Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, 1982). Full text reprinted as "Vietnamese White Book:
Claim to Paracel and Spratly Islands" in British Broadcasting
Corporation,Summary of World Broadcasts Part III Far East, no. 6932:
A3/10.
16 Republic of Vietnam, 16-8; Valencia, 30; Gerardo
Martin C. Valero,Spratly Archipelago: Is the Question of Sovereignty
Still Relevant? (Quezon City, Philippines: Institute of International
Legal Studies, 1993), 18; and Marwyn S. Samuels,Contest for the
South China Sea (New York: Methuen, 1982), 49 (note 32).
17 Republic of Vietnam, 4. The Hoang Sa islands were
conquered militarily by the PRC in 1974.
18 Republic of Vietnam, 4.
19 Valencia, 30.
20The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories.
21The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 1 - 2.
22The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories.
23 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 10 and Republic of Vietnam, 31.
24 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 10 and Socialist Republic of Vietnam,The Hoang
Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese Territories, 3.
25 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement" 10 and Socialist Republic of Vietnam,The Hoang
Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese Territories, 3.
26 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement" 10 and Socialist Republic of Vietnam,The Hoang
Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese Territories, 3; 4 - 5.
27 Republic of Vietnam, 29, 31. The quotation is
from the history annalsDai Nam Thuc Luc Chinh Bien, vol. 165.
28 Republic of Vietnam, 31-33; 69.
29 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 16. In 1843, a British
whaling ship, the Cyrus, "discovered" Truong Sa Island.
The Admiralty in London named it "Spratly Island" after
the captain of the Cyrus (see Hydrographic Office, The Admiralty,The
China Sea Directory, Vol. ii, [London: J. D. Potter, 1889], 83).
30The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 6.
31 Republic of Vietnam, 70, Vietnam's Sovereignty
over the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagos., 7, and Socialist
Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful Solution," 11.
32The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 6.
33 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Solution," 11.
34 Republic of Vietnam. Truong Sa Island was also
known as "Tempest Island."
35 Republic of Vietnam, 70 - 71. The quotation is
originally fromL'Eveil Economique de l'Indochine no. 790 (28 May
1933).
36 Republic of Vietnam, 71 - 73; Valencia, 30; and
French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, "Notices & Communications,"Journal
Officiel de la Republique Francaise 26 (July 1933): 7837. The date
listed in "Notices" for the occupation of Truong Sa Island
itself is 13 April 1930, three years before the rest of the archipelago.
It is likely that this is the date on which the crew ofLa Malicieuse
planted the French flag on "Tempest Island."
37 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 13 - 14, 17 and Chiu
and Park, "Legal Status" 24 (note 31).
38 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 14.
39 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 17.
40 Republic of Vietnam, 73.
41 Republic of Vietnam, 78 andThe Hoang Sa and Truong
Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese Territories, 7.
42 Republic of Vietnam, 78, 80.
43 Republic of Vietnam,, 74 andThe Hoang Sa and Truong
Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese Territories, 7.
44 Republic of Vietnam, 81.
45 Republic of Vietnam,73.
46 Republic of Vietnam, 76.
47 Chiu and Park, 8.
48 Valencia, 21.
49 Lim Teck Ghee and Mark J. Valencia [ed.],Conflict
over Natural Resources in South-East Asia and the Pacific (Singapore:
United Nations University Press, 1990), 105.
50 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 17.
51 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 17.
52 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 17 and Socialist Republic
of Vietnam, "Peaceful Settlement," 11.
53 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 17-18. The ROC garrison
remained on Dao Thai Bin. There are discrepancies as to the amount
of time the ROC has occupied this island, but it apparently withdrew
forces sometime after 1950 and did not return until it established
a permanent garrison in 1956. The ROC detachment is currently estimated
at 600 troops, making it the largest concentrated permanent military
force in the archipelago.
54The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 8.
55The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 8. It is important to note, however, that both the
PRC and the ROC were excluded from this conference.
56 Republic of Vietnam, 87.
57 Republic of Vietnam, 88.
58 Republic of Vietnam, 87.
59 Chiu and Park, 28 (note 103).
60 Chiu and Park, 9.
61 Valencia, 34.
62 Chiu and Park, 9; 15. However, the ROC established
a permanent presence (see note 54).
63The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 8.
64 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 12.
65 Valencia, 32 (note a). Xisha is the Chinese name
for the Hoang Sa.
66 Valencia, 32 (note b) and Chang,Territorial Disputes,
21.
67The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 8.
68 Republic of Vietnam, 91, 96.
69 Valencia, 34; 36.
70 Chang Pao-min, "A New Scramble for the South
China Sea Islands"Contemporary Southeast Asia, Vol 12, no.
1 (June 1990): 23.
71 Valencia, 233.
72 Chang, "New Scramble," 24-5.
73 Chang, "New Scramble," 24-5.
74 Chang, "New Scramble," 26.
75 Chang, "New Scramble," 26 and Hood,Dragons,
130.
76 Chang "New Scramble," 27.
77 Chang "New Scramble," 35 - 36.
78 Chang "New Scramble," 35-36.
79 Daljit Singh, "A Political Overview of Southeast
Asia"Southeast Asian Affairs 1992: 9.
80 See generally Ramses Amer, "The Territorial
Disputes between China and Vietnam and Regional Stability"Contemporary
Southeast Asia 19, no. 1 (June 1997).
81 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 13.
82 Valencia, 33.
83 Chiu and Park, 17.
84The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 9.
85 The legality of this annexation is questionable,
however, since China also had claims to the Truong Sa by virtue
of occupation by Chinese citizens. See Chiu and Park, 18.
86The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 9.
87 Valencia, 8. The PRC occupies 8 - 9 features,
the Philippines 8, Malaysia 3 - 6, and the ROC only 1. Brunei claims
only 2 reefs, but has not occupied any feature in the archipelago.
88 Valencia, 31.
89 Valencia, 31 - 32, 48.
90 Valencia, 31.
91 Chang,Territorial Dispute, 22.
92 Hood,Dragons, 131 - 132.
93 Valencia, 9 - 11.
94 Ghee,Natural Resources, 101, 112.
95 Ghee, 116.
96 Hood,Dragons, 129; 175 (note 39) and Robert F.
Ichord, Jr., "Southeast Asian Oil and United States Foreign
Policy" (unpublished doctoral dissertation), University of
Hawai'i (1975), 173.
97 Senior-Colonel Dinh Nho Hong, "Vietnam Armed
Forces and Asia-Pacific Stability" (unpublished paper), Asia
Pacific Center for Security Studies (2 October 1997): 14.
98 Recently, others have also reached a similar conclusion.
See Bob Catley and Makmur Keliat,Spratly's: The Dispute in the South
China Sea (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing, 1997), 93.
99 Raymond L. Garthoff,The Great Transition (Washington:
The Brookings Institution, 1994), 536.
100 Ghee,Natural Resources, 105.
101 Ghee,Natural Resources, 105, and Chang, "New
Scramble," 34.
102 The Japanese utilized the Truong Sa Islands as
a base from which it launched its invasion of the Philippines.
103 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 12.
104 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 12.
105 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, "Peaceful
Settlement," 12.
106 The Hoang Sa and Truong Sa Archipelagoes: Vietnamese
Territories, 14 - 15. Similar statements are found in the 1988 position
paper and both the 1979 and 1975 White Papers.
107 Valencia, 91, 94.
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