http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=196904

View Rate : 106 #            News Code : TTime- 196904        Print Date : 
Wednesday, June 17, 2009 

China acknowledges incident between sub, U.S. ship



BEIJING (AP) - China's Foreign Ministry acknowledged for the first time Tuesday 
a collision last week between a Chinese submarine and a sonar being towed by a 
U.S. Navy destroyer. 


The incident occurred Thursday, spokesman Qin Gang said, while giving no 
details. 

The U.S. Navy has had little comment on the incident, other than to say that 
the USS John S. McCain's towed sonar had been damaged. There have been no 
reports of injuries or damage to either vessel. 

While analysts said the collision appeared to be an accident, they have warned 
of a growing pattern of incidents and confrontations arising from China's 
growing naval power and willingness to assert territorial claims in waters off 
its coast. 

""What we're seeing are the initial stages of a growing military competition 
between the United States and China with naval forces rubbing up against each 
other in a dangerous and largely unregulated posturing for alliances and 
natural resources in the region,"" said Hans M. Kristensen, a researcher with 
the Federation of American Scientists in Washington, D.C. 

The incident reportedly occurred in international waters northwest of the 
former U.S. naval base at Subic Bay in the Philippines. Beijing considers the 
area its territorial waters as part of its claim to the entire South China Sea 
and opposes U.S. military operations and data gathering there. 


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