Ah, so if in your opinion they are not "getting away with it" why then will they suddenly think they will just because of what Russia did given Russia has faced somewhat stronger diplomatic consequences? After all your original premise was that China would think they can "get away with it," because Russia apparently has.Omega18 wrote: While it may come down more to specific actions by China rather than just the claim's, while there has not been anything like sanctions so far, there have been real international diplomatic consequences for China.
In a rather eye opening reaction given the Philippines history with Japan during WW2, its government had the following explicitly positive response to Japan revising its constitution to allow its military to be more aggressive in its posture in the future.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/107485 ... t-military
Given the way the U.S. got basically kicked out of these Philippine bases, the fact they have recently been welcomed back to a degree is also notable.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/ ... GE20140314
There is even talk about US forces getting regular access to Vietnamese bases in the future, which in combination with recent Vietnamese links with Japan suggests China is well on its well to creating a general regional alliance against it.
http://thediplomat.com/2014/05/vietnam- ... ter-china/
http://news.usni.org/2014/06/02/japan-p ... -next-year
Firstly for it to determine sea boundaries when it clashes with the EEZ of other islands, you would have to first accept those other islands are someone else sovereignty. This is still being disputed.
My objection was never with setting up buildings in the first place if you read my post again. It is specifically about creating NEW islands which is a completely different matter altogether.
http://news.usni.org/2014/06/02/japan-p ... -next-year
Its this specific action which is so troubling and suggests a dangerous future disruptive precedent if it gets to be an accepted method to determine sea boundaries.
Secondly I need a bit more than vague statement that there weren't islands there before and I will explain why. Because the legal definition of an island only requires a small amount of land above level. Some of what are called reefs can support bases on them. This is the basis of the Phillipines legal argument from your own article, that is what China occupies isn't legally an island. What land reclamation does is increase the amount of space so they can put in bigger military bases to better protect their claims if the conflict ever turned hot. In terms of EEZ a nation is allowed to claim 200 nautical miles from an island. The island can't be made that much bigger and is small compared to the 200 nautical miles allowed for EEZ.
The propaganda part is why Americans need to fight in China, not China rules Tibet. The video is even titled Why we fight. This is blatant dodging the point and ignores the fact that China was accepted by major powers including the most powerful nation as having sovereignty over Tibet pre WWII as per your own criteria.You're talking about a propaganda video whose focus was mostly elsewhere rather than China's true legal boundaries, and is certainly not the sort of source that would be considered reliable regarding this sort of thing. I am rather astonished that you would even bother bringing it up as a point of evidence to be blunt.
Now I know you either didn't watch the video or are being dishonest. It divides China up into regions which includes what it calls China proper, Tibet, Sinkiang (Xinjiang) and a few others. Either you ignored the rest, or just watched the first few seconds and didn't wait for it to finish the part when it talks about China's geography.It even proceeds to show "China proper" with more limited boundaries which further undermines the point you appear to have been trying to make.
So when I satisfy your own criteria of before post WWII sovereignty you now demand more evidence. Videos for the US government aren't formal enough are they? How about you find your list of nations in that time frame which disputed Chinese sovereignty instead of me doing the work then having you say it doesn't count because that would admit you were wrong.To be possibly truly relevant, it would need to be something like a formal US or map from an intentionally recognized authority, (possibly the League of Nations give the time frame) specifically showing country boundaries. (Admittedly this is getting somewhat off topic from the original thread subject.)
You appear to have missed my specific point in regards to those claims being POST WWII and not to the EEZ per se. I even stated post WWII in the post you replied. This looks like you are pretending I am NOT addressing your statement " Basically in the post WW2 world barring generally extreme circumstances country boundaries should stay the same because any other rule gets messy in a hurry", and pretend that I am trying to address your EEZ claims in this post.You appear to have missed my specific objection was with China's EEZ claims and not their claims on the islands in question persay.
Basically in this case you're talking about islands that have basically been historically uninhabited and historically had disputed claims to them. Given the relatively recent permanent stationing of even troops on the island, I put them in a very different category than say the Falklands which has had a long term resident non-military population. (I also put uninhabited islands with long undisputed or clearly settled territorial claims in a different category.)