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The Komodo 2016 naval gathering is supposed to be for feel-good exercises. Ships from the U.S., China and nearly three dozen other nations come together to practice maritime cooperation to prepare for natural disasters such as the 2004 tsunami blamed for more than 230,000 deaths.

But geopolitics and the South China Sea dispute are threatening to overshadow the exercises’ original purpose.

Chinese officials have complained in recent days about rival Japan’s plans to send a 3,950-ton Hyuga-class helicopter destroyer through contested waters of the South China Sea to join the exercises and condemned a statement from the foreign ministers of the Group of Seven meeting in Japan this week that expressed their “strong opposition to any intimidating, coercive or provocative unilateral actions” in the waterway — a clear warning to Beijing.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Kang accused the G-7 diplomats of “hyping up maritime issues and fueling tensions in the region.”

“We urge G-7 members to abide by their promise of not taking sides on territorial disputes, respect the efforts by regional countries, stop all irresponsible words and actions and make constructive contribution to regional peace and stability.”

Tensions went up once more Thursday when Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, on a visit to Manila, revealed the Pentagon’s plans to send troops and combat aircraft to the Philippines for regular, more frequent rotations, along with plans to conduct more joint sea and air patrols with Philippine forces in the South China Sea.

Steady buildup

China has long feuded with the U.S. and its own neighbors — including the Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia and Indonesia — over its expansive sovereignty claims in the South China Sea. Beijing’s steady buildup of facilities and forces on artificial islands it has created in the sea have only increased the tensions.

With U.S. presidents traditionally reluctant to confront China in their final months in office, the Komodo exercises are also shining a spotlight on what some say is the growing divide between the Obama White House and the Pentagon over the South China Sea incursions.

In a much-discussed article, the Navy Times this month said Mr. Obama and his top aides were rejecting pleas from U.S. Pacific Command chief Adm. Harry Harris for a much more hawkish approach to China’s South China Sea moves, including “military operations as part of an effort to stop what [Adm. Harris] has called the ‘Great Wall of Sand’ before it extends within 140 miles from the Philippines’ capital.”

Susan E. Rice, Mr. Obama’s national security adviser, was said to have imposed a “gag order” on Adm. Harris and other senior military officials on this issue ahead of the president’s nuclear security summit late last month, when Mr. Obama held a private meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The report, citing unidentified officials, sparked so much comment that the Pentagon issued an unusual public denial April 6 that the military commanders on China’s South China Sea moves were being censored.

“We are confident that [the military commanders’] counsel has been considered and valued,” Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook told reporters.

“To be clear,” he said, “there has never been a ‘gag order,’ as described by anonymous officials in the article and any assertion that there is a disconnect between U.S. Pacific Command and the White House is simply not true.”

A softly-softly approach

Mr. Obama’s softly-softly approach has found support among some military analysts, who say Beijing’s power moves are leaving it isolated and vulnerable to challenges under international law.

The Komodo exercises could be “an opportunity for naval personnel to get together and discuss their concerns publicly or privately about regional stability,” said Natalie Sambhi, a research fellow at the Perth USAsia Center.

The Multilateral Naval Exercise Komodo was initiated in 2014 by the U.S. and Indonesia — haunted by memories of shortcomings and lack of coordination in the regional response to the horrendous 2004 tsunami — to improve relief efforts by the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and other regional partners, including Australia, Japan, South Korea and Russia.

This year’s Komodo exercises were launched Tuesday morning from Padang with 48 ships taking part in maneuvers around the Mentawai Islands in West Sumatra.

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Read more at Washington Times

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