China, Vietnam look
to bolster ties amid sea dispute
Chinese state agency
issued what it called a joint statement pushing for a ‘peaceful’ resolution of
the maritime row
April 8, 2015 9:00AM ET
China and
Vietnam pledged to bolster diplomatic
ties in a meeting this week between the two nations’ heads of state. The latest
exchange, publicized in their countries' state media, is a vast departure from
the past few years of heated rhetoric over the South China Sea.
China claims more than 90 percent of the South China Sea,
displaying its reach on official maps with a so-called nine-dash line that
stretches deep into the maritime heart of Southeast Asia — much to the chagrin
the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Taiwan and Vietnam.
What Chinese state news agency Xinhua reported Wednesday was a joint communique from
Beijing and Hanoi said that both countries had a "candid" exchange
regarding their
long-standing maritime spat.
Xinhua reported that the two countries agreed to "use well
the Sino-Vietnam government border negotiation mechanism, uphold friendly
consultations and negotiations to look for a basic and lasting resolution both
countries can accept.”
China and Vietnam should also "proactively look for
transitional resolution methods which do not affect either side's position,
including looking at and discussing joint development,” Xinhua said.
Neither country should do anything to "complicate or
expand" the dispute in order to ensure peace and stability in the sea, the
statement added.
Vietnam’s official Communist Party newspaper Nhan Dan said nothing
in an English-language article about
the government border negotiation mechanism and made no pledges not to fan the
flames of the territorial dispute, but Communist Party Secretary Nguyen Phu
Trong was reported as lauding efforts to strengthen ties with Beijing.
Nguyen “noted that Vietnam and China have enjoyed a time-honored
friendship and comprehensive strategic co-operative partnership,” the newspaper
reported, adding that Nguyen “expressed his hope that [diplomatic advocacy
group the China-Vietnam Friendship Association] and Chinese friends would
continue exerting efforts for diplomatic ties.”
Trade has swelled to $50 billion annually, but Vietnam has long
been suspicious of its giant neighbor, especially over China's increasingly
assertive claims to almost the entire South China Sea.
Anti-Chinese
violence flared in Vietnam last year after a $1 billion
deepwater rig owned by China's state-run CNOOC oil company was parked 150 miles
off the coast of Vietnam in the South China Sea.
Since then, however, China has sought to make amends with Vietnam,
including sending senior officials to Hanoi.
Chinese President Xi Jinping told General Secretary Nguyen on
Tuesday that the two countries must manage their dispute over the South China Sea well
to maintain peace and stability.
Vietnam has
strengthened its military relationship with the United States since
the South China Sea dispute has heated up following Xi's assumption of power in
2013, and Vietnam has also sought common ground with the Philippines on facing
China over the spat.
Al Jazeera and Reuters
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