ຈີນ ແມ່ນເກືອບວ່າຈະເສັດສິ້ນ ໃນການກໍ່ສ້າງທາງທະຫານ ຢູ່ເທິງເກາະທຽມ ໃນທະເລຈີນໃຕ້ ອີງຕາມລາຍງານຂອງອົງການຂ່າວ Reuters ໃນການພັດທະນາ ທີ່ແນ່ ນອນຈະເປັນການທົດສອບລັດຖະບານໃໝ່ຂອງທ່ານ Trump.
ເຈົ້າໜ້າທີ່ສະຫະລັດທີ່ບໍ່ປະສົງອອກຊື່ ກ່າວຕໍ່ອົງການຂ່າວຮອຍເຕີ້ວ່າ ການກໍ່ສ້າງດັ່ງກ່າວນີ້ ແມ່ນໃກ້ຈະເສັດສິ້ນແລ້ວ ຊຶ່ງມີຕຶກອາຄານຕ່າງໆ ປະມານ 20 ກວ່າຫຼັງ ທີ່ມີຫຼັງຄາເປີດອອກໄດ້ ທີ່ຈະສາມາດຍິງລູກສອນໄຟ ໄລຍະໄກ ຈາກພື້ນດິນ ສູ່ອາກາດໄດ້ ໃນໝູ່ເກາະ Spratly.
ການກໍ່ສ້າງຕຶກໃໝ່ນີ້ ອາດຖືວ່າ ເປັນການເພີ້ມທະວີທາງທະຫານ ຂອງຝ່າຍຈີນ ຊຶ່ງພວກ
ນັກຊ່ຽວຊານຫຼາຍທ່ານ ໄດ້ບອກກັບ VOA ວ່າ ມັນຈະສາມາດທົດສອບປະທານາທິບໍດີ
ທ່ານ Donald Trump ໃນໄວໆນີ້ ຊຶ່ງເອົາທ່າທີຢ່າງແຂງຂັນ ຕໍ່ຕ້ານຈີນ ໃນຕະຫຼອດໄລຍະໂຄສະນາຫາສຽງຂອງທ່ານ.
“ນີ້ແມ່ນສ່ວນນຶ່ງຂອງຄວາມພະຍາຍາມຂອງພວກເຂົາ ທີ່ໃນທີ່ສຸດກໍຈະຄວບຄຸມ
ໝູ່ເກາະ ໃນທະເລຈີນໃຕ້ ແລະອ້າງເອົາກຳມະສິດແບບກ້າຫານ ເຖິງແມ່ນວ່າ
ພວກເຂົາ ໄດ້ຖືກປະຕິເສດໂດຍສານນາໆຊາດທີ່ນະຄອນ Hague ແມ່ນອີງຕາມ
ສົນທິສັນຍາວ່າດ້ວຍກົດໝາຍທາງທະເລ ທີ່ພວກເຂົາເຈົ້າເປັນສະມາຊິກນັ້ນ”
ນັ້ນຄືຄຳເວົ້າຂອງທ່ານ Robert Manning ເຈົ້າໜ້າທີ່ອະວຸໂສ ຈາກສະພາ Atlantic
ໄດ້ບອກກັບ VOA ໄວ້.
ທ່ານ Brad Glasserman ຜູ້ອຳນວຍການສະພາວ່າດ້ວຍຄວາມໝັ້ນຄົງຂອງພວກນັກຊ່ຽວຊານ Pacific ທີ່ມີສຳນັກງານ ຢູ່ລັດ Hawaii ໄດ້ບອກກັບ VOA ວ່າ ນີ້ແມ່ນບາດກ້າວອີກອັນນຶ່ງໃນຄວາມພະຍາຍາມຂອງຈີນເມື່ອໄວໆມານີ້ເພື່ອຈະເຮັດໃຫ້ ໝູ່ເກາະເຫຼົ່ານັ້ນກາຍເປັນທີ່ຕັ້ງທາງທະຫານຫຼາຍຂຶ້ນ.
China is almost finished building military structures on its artificial islands in the South China Sea, Reuters reports, in a development that is sure to test the new Trump administration.
Unnamed U.S. officials told the news service construction is almost complete on nearly two dozen structures with retractable roofs designed to house long-range surface-to-air missiles on the Spratly Island chain.
The new development could be considered a military escalation on China's part, several experts told VOA, and could serve as an early test for President Donald Trump, who took a hardline against China throughout his campaign.
"This is part of their effort to eventually control that first island chain in the SCS and assert their claim, even though they have been completely repudiated by the International Court of Appeals, The Hague, based on the Law of the Sea Treaty, of which they are a member," Robert Manning, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council told VOA.
Brad Glosserman, executive director of the Hawaii-based security think tank Pacific Forum, told VOA this was another step in China's recent attempts to further militarize the islands.
"Clearly they are intending to build facilities that allow them to permanently store or deploy equipment of a military nature to these islands," he said.
A report released by the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI) in December shows China has been building airstrips and anti-aircraft systems on the artificial islands since at least June of 2016.
China's Defense Ministry issued a statement at the time, saying the construction was "mainly for civilian use."
The Trump administration has taken a strong stance against the militarization of the islands, with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in January suggesting the United States block China from accessing the islands.
"We're going to have to send China a clear signal that, first, the island-building stops and, second, your access to those islands also is not going to be allowed," he said during his confirmation hearing before the U.S. Senate.
White House Spokesman Sean Spicer backed Tillerson up when asked about the comments, saying the United States needed to "protect our interests" in the South China Sea.
"It's a question of if those islands are in fact in international waters and not part of China proper, then yeah, we're going to make sure that we defend international territories from being taken over by one country," Spicer said during a press conference last month.
While the artificial islands could become a strong test of the Trump administration's foreign policy, the islands weren't designed with that intention, Glosserman said.
"It constitutes a test for this president, just as it constitutes a test for any president, but this was not done specifically to challenge Mr. Trump," he said. "This was a determination that the Chinese had made about what they wanted to do, and that therefore they are going to proceed. It becomes a challenge, but it was not designed as such."