The US reportedly flew B-52s in the South China Sea as it directly challenges Beijing's militarization
- The US has reportedly made a bold move in countering Beijing's growing dominance in the South China Sea by flying B-52 nuclear-capable bombers over disputed islands.
- The flight of the B-52s, reported by CNN but denied by the Pentagon, follows the US using tougher language against China as Beijing dominates the waterway and bullies its neighbors.
- If the US did fly nuclear-capable bombers over the islands, it could mark a clear escalation in the growing tensions in the South China Sea.
The US has reportedly made a bold move in countering Beijing's growing dominance in the South China Sea by flying B-52 nuclear-capable bombers over disputed islands - and it shows how the US and China may rapidly be approaching a showdown.
The flight of the B-52s, reported by CNN but denied by the Pentagon, follows China landing nuclear-capable bombers of its own on the islands and years of Beijing ignoring international law to bully its neighbors and seize control of the waterway that sees trillions in annual shipping and holds untold billions in natural resources.
It also follows Defense Secretary Jim Mattis calling out China at a conference in Singapore, according to CNN.
"China's militarization of artificial features in the South China Sea includes the deployment of anti-ship missiles, surface-to-air missiles, electronic jammers, and more recently, the landing of bomber aircraft at Woody Island," Mattis said.
Chinese President Xi Jinping swore at the White House with former President Barack Obama in 2015 that he would not militarize the islands, and continues to claim the islands have not been militarized despite the obvious presence of military equipment.
China now calls claims that the islands are militarized "ridiculous," but Mattis wasn't having that.
"The placement of these weapons systems is tied directly to military use for the purposes of intimidation and coercion," said Mattis.
The B-52s reportedly flew within 20 miles of the Spratly Islands, which China claims for itself and has built military facilities on. But Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippines, and Taiwan also claim the islands, and China has repeatedly made a show of refusing to let international courts settle the matter.
The US has a lot of experience taking down small islands
Earlier in June, a top US general asserted the US military's power to act against threats to international order, saying "the United States military has had a lot of experience in the Western Pacific, taking down small islands."
In another rhetorical shift, the US military renamed its Pacific command "Indo-Pacific command" to emphasize India and advance a vision of the Pacific not dominated by China.
But China shows no sign of stopping its march to domination of the valuable waterway, recently using its navy to block out the Philippine navy from feeding its own troops on one of its holdings in the South China Sea.
China's dominance meets US resolve
In meetings with Vietnam and the Philippines, China has been understood to threaten force against the smaller countries if they undertake activity in their own, legally claimed waters.
When the US challenges Beijing's claims in the South China Sea, or any country's excessive maritime claims (the US challenged 22 nations in 2016), it usually does so with a US Navy destroyer.
If the US flew nuclear bombers across the island, that would mark a clear escalation and perhaps the beginning of US military actions matching its rhetoric.