Saturday, 2 Aug 2025
Exclusive insights, data, and analysis for financial market experts.
Explore Now
Asia Business News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Politics
  • Breaking News
Subscribe
  • China
  • firm
  • South
  • Tariffs
  • Startup
  • President
  • market
  • Indian
  • Trump
  • Million
Asia Business NewsAsia Business News
Font ResizerAa
  • Read History
  • Environment
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Finance
  • Technology
Search
  • Pages
    • Home
    • Blog Index
    • Contact Us
    • Search Page
    • 404 Page
  • Personalized
    • Read History
  • Categories
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Technology
    • Environment
    • Finance
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Breaking News

China’s Research Masks A Military Agenda From Alaska To Manila

Asia Business News
Last updated: August 1, 2025 1:25 am
By Asia Business News
Share
9 Min Read
SHARE
Coast Guard helicopter above the internal passage

Above the U.S. Coast Guard rescue helicopter is an internal passage in Alaska.

Getty

China’s global research agenda has some terrible discoveries. This week, the U.S. Coast Guard drove away Chinese research vessels operating near Alaska. The Philippines is currently tracking three Chinese research vessels within its exclusive economic region. China is also strengthening its research globally, leading to conflicts with South Korea and other states. Although China claims that these research activities have benign and scientific purposes, the behavior of these ships implies something else. China’s use of these ships also demonstrates China’s legal warfare – its use and abuse of international law to achieve military and strategic goals.

From Australia to Alaska, Chinese-signed vessels are collecting ocean data on an unprecedented scale. Over the past four years, 64 civil survey ships have been operated by 64 civil survey ships for hundreds of thousands of hours. 80% of these ships are linked to China’s military or geopolitical agenda. Japan, India, Taiwan, Australia, etc. also reported a large collection of marine data from Chinese vessels and Chinese ships in the past few years.

Whether all this activity is illegal is considered China’s potential military intentions. China can easily direct civilian research for military purposes. In 2020, Australia expressed concern that Chinese ships, while operating legally, were mapping areas that Australian submarines often used to enter the South China Sea. India expressed concern that China has been using unmanaged underwater vehicles to collect data on potential military uses. The civilian research vessels were accompanied by the Chinese Coast Guard and the Chinese Navy to further question their peaceful purposes. Some research vessels carry exquisite manned submersibles, advanced sonars to scan the sea floor and buoys to study marine conditions. Some ships have reportedly deployed marine drones and glide underwater. China’s data collection near Taiwan has increased, potentially seeking intelligence that helps navigate and locate in combat.

China and South Korea confrontation in the Yellow Sea

In February, Chinese and South Korean ships were at a stalemate when Chinese research activities blocked part of the Yellow Sea. China has recently expanded aquaculture facilities in areas with temporary measures between China and South Korea. The unit includes a retired offshore oil rig and two large octagonal steel cages, one of which is 2024. PMZ was created by both countries in 2001 to manage their overlapping EEZ claims in the narrow sea. The agreement allows fishing in both states, but does not mention aquaculture, allowing China to operate its structure in a legal gray area.

South Korea expressed concerns about the dual use of the facility. Satellite images show that offshore oil platforms have functions other than aquaculture. South Korean analysts expressed concerns about China’s activities in the South China Sea, with China’s research platforms and oil rigs eventually turning into artificial islands and illegal maritime claims.

During a two-hour standoff in February, a South Korean marine survey ship attempted to inspect the device and was blocked by Chinese Coast Guard and civilian ships. China soon expanded its claims elsewhere in the Yellow Sea. In May, a regional branch of the China Maritime Security Administration announced a “sailless zone” that prohibits ships from entering the South Yellow Sea area. China has established two areas for military exercises in both the PMZ and the region overlapping with the South Korean EEZ.

The United States hunts down Chinese-signature research vessel near Alaska this week

China has also been found to conduct research in American waters. Last year, China conducted an extensive and extensive investigation near Guam. The study may be used for mineral exploration, but ship routes suggest that China is seeking to better navigate the region with submarines. On July 26, the U.S. Coast Guard responded to a Chinese research vessel in Arctic waters near Alaska and claimed the U.S. exclusive rights to manage resources in its extended continental shelf.

China’s reaction to the US chasing on a research ship near Alaska is revealing. In 2023, the United States articulated its claims on the extended continental shelf, including overlap with the Russian and Canadian Arctic claims. The United States’ claim is based on recognized customary international law. China bombed the United States as international labor when the U.S. Coast Guard responded to a Chinese research vessel near Alaska. Global Age is the mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, and reports that the United States “promoted the ‘China threat’ remarks only to justify evil behavior in the US Arctic, which shows that it is a rule violation and a global trouble.

The view of international law on China’s maritime research and data collection

Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, ocean data collection must be used for peaceful purposes. Coastal countries must allow foreign countries to conduct marine scientific research or explore their exploration of natural resources in the EEZ or continental shelf. Not all states in the United States agree that US military investigation operations and operational oceanography (regular ocean observations) do not require the consent of coastal countries.

The Chinese ships discussed above are only civilian ships and international law will prohibit them from conducting military investigations. Many, if not most, behave differently from operating oceanography and falls into the category that requires permission from coastal states. Some of these Chinese vessels’ activities, including vessels around oil and gas exploration areas, mean that coastal countries require commercial purposes for granting research licenses. China has repeatedly used scientific research vessels, especially those with military capabilities, which suggests that its vessels are being used to push its excessive maritime claims, rather than for peaceful purposes. China usually blurs the difference between civilians and military vehicles, thus eroding the core principles of the law of war.

How to protect maritime rights from China’s “research”

The United States and its allies must work together to demand their maritime rights to China. The United States and its allies should share information about China’s maritime data collection to determine the methods and purposes of these activities. They should carefully examine each ship involved and determine whether the type of activity in China violates international law. The United States and its allies and partners should cooperate in law enforcement where possible. And if China is mapping potential conflicts in Taiwan or the region, the United States and its allies must share intelligence and figure out how to stop them.

The United States and its allies should also expose China’s violations of international law. As this week’s Global Era The article shows that China has regrettably committed a violation of the law. The United States and its allies should use it against China without hesitation and loudly, proudly defend the international system based on rules. The United States and its allies must demand compliance with international law in words and actions. If we do not use maritime rights, we will throw them to China and its narrative of competition against us

Share This Article
Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Spending plan freeze in future Indonesian funding elevates uncertainties concerning Prabowo-Jokowi connections
Next Article 7MM hidradenitis suppurativa market to quadruple by 2034 

Subscribe Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
XFollow
InstagramFollow
LinkedInFollow
MediumFollow
RSS FeedFollow

Top News

Political

Pressed right into Bangladesh by India’s Boundary Safety Pressure: ‘I simply desire my mom back’

August 2, 2025
Finance

Baidu to Deal Ernie Chatbot Free Of Charge Amidst DeepSeek Difficulty

March 19, 2025
Tech

Angkas gas up for PH competition with Grab

March 19, 2025
Medical

Many thanks to a brand-new collaboration with the area’s state college.

March 19, 2025

You May also Like

Breaking News

Honor Magic V5 Is The Thinnest Collapsible Phone Once Again

July 6, 2025
Breaking News

Moguls Obtain A Wide Range Increase In Spite Of Market Trouble. Robert Kuok Continues to be Nation’s Richest.

April 17, 2025
Breaking News

Tycoon Lin Yung Ling’s Gamuda Wins $1.8 Billion Rail Project In Penang

July 19, 2025
Breaking News

The Web Content Creators And Influencers Utilizing Their Systems To Inspire Activity

July 29, 2025
Show More
  • More News:
  • China
  • firm
  • South
  • Tariffs
  • Startup
  • President
  • market
  • Indian
  • Trump
  • Million
  • Healthcare
  • Chinese
  • Billionaire
  • Hospital
  • Asia
  • Korean
  • Tech
  • Global
  • India
  • Health
Asia Business News

Asia Business News (ISSN: 3079-8531) is a leading international business publication dedicated to delivering in-depth analysis, expert insights, and comprehensive coverage of economic trends, corporate developments, and market dynamics across the Asia-Pacific region and beyond. With a commitment to journalistic integrity and analytical rigor, Asia Business News serves as a trusted source of information for business leaders, policymakers, and investors seeking authoritative perspectives on global commerce, finance, and industry advancements.

Rss

About Company

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with US
  • Complaint
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Submit a Tip

© 2025 Asia Business News (ISSN: 3079-8531). All rights reserved.

This publication, including but not limited to all articles, reports, analyses, graphics, images, designs, and any other content, is the exclusive intellectual property of Asia Business News (ISSN: 3079-8531). Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, transmission, display, or publication of any portion of this content, in any form or by any means, including but not limited to electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without the prior written consent of the publisher, is strictly prohibited.

Welcome to Foxiz
Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?