Western media expose their prejudice

By Zhang Junshe
China Daily, July 24, 2014

Usni.org, the official website of US Naval Institute, has created a controversy by posting an article that says, "China sends uninvited spy ship to Rimpac" (Rim of the Pacific Exercise). Quoting anonymous sources, the article says, "the ship was operating south of the Hawaiian island of Oahu, near the USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76) carrier strike group (CSG) and the main body of the 50 ships participating in the exercise".

Several Western media outlets, as if waiting for such an opportunity, immediately swung into action. Chinatopix.com published an article on Monday saying that China "spies" on Rimpac exercise, while The Wall Street Journal said: "Beijing shadows naval exercises in which it is already participating". The Japan Times added to the media drama by publishing another anti-China article.

Such sensationalizing by the media is deplorable.

The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea approves of navigation and overflight in non-territorial waters, and Chinese ships have always abided by the laws of coastal states while navigating in such waters. In his interviews, as well as his e-mail statement, US Pacific Fleet chief spokesman Darryn James has made it clear that the Chinese ship's presence was "in accordance with international law regarding freedom of navigation".

The truth is that the US and its allies have carried out regular surveillances against China in the past years. US surveillance vehicles have left their footprints from the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea to the South China Sea, and from Hainan Island to Xisha Islands. The US uses airplanes, including naval surveillance planes, ocean survey vessels and even nuclear submarines to spy on China. Data show that the US carries out hundreds of surveillances against China every year, much more than those it conducted against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

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