Key Points

The US Congress is sounding alarms about China's calculated expansion across the Indo-Pacific region. Experts testified that Beijing uses coercive tactics that deliberately stay below military confrontation thresholds. China has built artificial islands and military installations to control nearly 80% of the South China Sea. This slow, strategic aggression mirrors Russia's approach in Crimea while avoiding direct conflict with the United States.

Key Points: US Congress Warns of China's Illegal Indo-Pacific Expansion Tactics

  • China builds artificial islands and military bases across South China Sea
  • US Senator compares tactics to Putin's 2014 Crimea invasion
  • Chinese vessels involved in 79% of South China Sea incidents
  • Strategy designed to avoid direct military confrontation with US
2 min read

China's silent invasion: US Congress warns of China's illegal Indo-Pacific expansion

Senate hearing reveals China's calculated strategy to expand territory without open warfare, using coercive means in South China Sea and against Taiwan.

"The world is already decades into losing a gray-zone war - Raymond Powell, SeaLight Foundation"

Washington, DC, October 8

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been accused of carrying out a long-term and calculated strategy to expand its territorial and maritime claims across the Indo-Pacific without triggering open warfare, as reported by The Epoch Times.

According to The Epoch Times, during a hearing of the US Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asia, the Pacific, and International Cybersecurity Policy, Senator Chris Coons (D-Del.) warned that China's creeping expansion mirrors Russian President Vladimir Putin's actions in Crimea in 2014.

He said that several successive US administrations had failed to effectively respond because Beijing's tactics deliberately stayed below the threshold of direct military confrontation.

Experts testifying before Congress highlighted that the CCP is using illegal and coercive means to expand both its physical territory and global influence. Particular attention was given to its growing military pressure on Taiwan and its unlawful claims over islands and natural resources in the South China Sea areas located hundreds of miles from China's coastline.

For decades, the CCP has built artificial islands and established military installations across the South China Sea to assert control over nearly 80 per cent of the region.

Despite a 2016 international court ruling that rejected these claims, China refused to recognise the decision, insisting that it held "indisputable sovereignty" over the waters.

Data from the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies showed that Chinese naval and maritime law enforcement vessels were involved in nearly 79 per cent of all major incidents in the South China Sea between 2010 and 2020.

Experts said these actions are part of a wider strategy designed to steadily erode regional resistance while avoiding a direct clash with the United States, as highlighted by The Epoch Times.

Craig Singleton of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies described China's expansion as "incremental and ambiguous", meant to weaken Taiwan's resolve.

Meanwhile, Raymond Powell of the SeaLight Foundation warned that the world is already "decades into losing a gray-zone war" to China's slow and strategic territorial aggression, as reported by The Epoch Times.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While China's actions are worrying, I'm not sure The Epoch Times is the most reliable source. We need balanced reporting from multiple perspectives. Still, the pattern of expansion is undeniable.
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Arjun K
China has been doing this for years! Remember their claims in Arunachal Pradesh and the constant border tensions? This slow expansion strategy is exactly what we've been facing. India needs to be more vigilant.
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Sarah B
As someone living in Delhi, I see how China's influence is growing everywhere. From infrastructure projects to trade dominance, they're playing the long game. We need smarter foreign policy responses.
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Vikram M
The South China Sea situation affects freedom of navigation that's crucial for Indian trade. We can't afford to be silent spectators. QUAD and other regional partnerships must be strengthened urgently. 🚢
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Michael C
While China's actions are concerning, I hope India maintains its strategic autonomy and doesn't become just another pawn in US-China rivalry. We need to protect our own interests first and foremost.

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