Jakarta Globe, Pete Sweeney, Dec 27, 2014
Shanghai. Senior Chinese and Vietnamese officials have agreed to settle their maritime disputes without resorting to “megaphone diplomacy”, the official Xinhua news service said on Saturday.
Shanghai. Senior Chinese and Vietnamese officials have agreed to settle their maritime disputes without resorting to “megaphone diplomacy”, the official Xinhua news service said on Saturday.
The
agency’s report follows a meeting in Hanoi on Friday between Chinese political
advisor Yu Zhengsheng and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, and it
comes as Beijing backs off from aggressive attempts to press its territorial
claims in the South China Sea.
“Megaphone
diplomacy can only trigger volatility in public opinion, which should be
avoided by both sides,” the report quoted Yu as saying.
“The
maritime issue is highly complicated and sensitive, which requires negotiations
to manage and control differences,” he said.
Although
major trading partners and sharing the same nominal commitment to communism,
China and Vietnam have a long history of distrust and conflict, including a
short war in 1978 when Chinese troops invaded Vietnam in response to Hanoi’s
invasion of Cambodia, run at the time by the China-backed genocidal Khmer Rouge
regime.
Both
governments, which lay claim to revolutionary credentials of resistance to
foreign invaders, must also placate their respective nationalists demanding
more aggressive defense of territory.
The
conflict has been aggravated in recent years as China has grown more assertive
about its claims in South China Sea, which set China’s sea border hundreds of
kilometers south of its land mass to hug most Vietnam’s coast.
China
pressed those claims dramatically early in 2014 by placing an oil drilling rig
in waters claimed by Vietnam, then confronted Vietnamese vessels attempting to
approach the platform with water cannon and ramming tactics.
Vietnamese
citizens reacted by trashing Chinese factories (and factories they mistook for
Chinese) inside Vietnam, and the government moved to warm military ties with
the US and also bought two Kilo-class attack submarines from Russia as a
deterrent.
Beijing has
since removed the oil rig and has signaled it wants better relations with
Vietnam.China has recently launched initiatives for a regional investment bank
and an infrastructure fund that would position it as a benevolent driver of
regional economic development.

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