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OCEANDEVELOPMENT&INTERNATIONALLAW https://doi.org/10.1080/00908320.2018.1443420 ORIGINALARTICLE Offshore Archipelagos Enclosed by Straight Baselines: An Excessive Claim? J.AshleyRoach U.SDepartmentofState(Retired),Washington,DC,USA ABSTRACT ARTICLEHISTORY This article examines the conclusion in the decision of the Arbitral Received25November2017 Tribunal in the South China Sea Case that straight baselines may not Accepted28November2017 beusedtoencloseoff-shorearchipelagosunlesstheymeetthecriteria KEYWORDS setoutinArticles46and47oftheLawoftheSeaConvention. 1958TerritorialSea Convention;LawoftheSea Convention;archipelago; baselines;statepractice Introduction Inits2016awardonthemeritsinthematteroftheSouthChinaSeaarbitrationbetweenthe PhilippinesandChina,theArbitralTribunalwrote: TheConventionalsoprovides,initsArticle7,forStatestomakeuseofstraightbaselinesundercertain circumstances,andtheTribunalisawareofthepracticeofsomeStatesinemployingstraightbaselines withrespecttooffshorearchipelagostoapproximatetheeffectofarchipelagicbaselines.IntheTribu- nal’sview,anyapplicationofstraightbaselinestotheSpratlyIslandsinthisfashionwouldbecontrary to the Convention. Article 7 provides for the application of straight baselines only “[i]n localities wherethecoastlineisdeeplyindentedandcutinto,orifthereisafringeofislandsalongthecoastin its immediate vicinity.” These conditions do not include the situation of an offshore archipelago. AlthoughtheConventiondoesnotexpresslyprecludetheuseofstraightbaselinesinothercircum- stances,theTribunalconsidersthatthegrantofpermissioninArticle7concerningstraightbaselines generally,togetherwiththeconditionalpermissioninArticles46and47forcertainStatestodraw archipelagicbaselines,excludesthepossibilityofemployingstraightbaselinesinothercircumstances, inparticularwithrespecttooffshorearchipelagosnotmeetingthecriteriaforarchipelagicbaselines. AnyotherinterpretationwouldeffectivelyrendertheconditionsinArticles7and47meaningless. NotwithstandingthepracticeofsomeStatestothecontrary,theTribunalseesnoevidencethatany deviationsfromthisrulehaveamountedtotheformationofanewruleofcustomaryinternational lawthatwouldpermitadeparturefromtheexpressprovisionsoftheConvention.1 TheAwarddoesnotprovideanyfurtheranalysistosupporttheseconclusions.Thispaper seeks to fill those gaps. After distinguishing “offshore archipelagos” from “archipelagic States,”thepaperexaminestherelevantprovisionsoftheLawoftheSea(LOS)Convention andthenegotiatinghistoryofArticle46inPartIVoftheConventiononarchipelagicstates. CONTACT J.AshleyRoach [email protected] 820S.QuincySt.,Arlington,VA22204-1562. Theviewsexpressedinthisarticlearethoseoftheauthorandarenotintendedtoreflecttheviewsofanygovernmentor agency.Theauthorisgratefulforthecommentsandsuggestionsmadethatimprovedthetext.Allerrorsremaintheresponsi- bilityoftheauthor. ©2018Taylor&FrancisGroup,LLC 2 J.A.ROACH Thereafter,relevantstatepracticeisreviewed,aswellasthePhilippinesresponsetotheTri- bunal’s question as to a customary international law right to draw straight baselines to enclose offshore archipelagos. Next, the possibility of enclosing the Spratlys (Nansha) with straightbaselinesisreviewed.Thereafter,writingsthatsupportenclosingoffshorearchipela- gos with straight baselines are examined. The rules on the formation of customary interna- tional law are examined in this context. Possible remedies for judicial determination of enclosingoffshorearchipelagoswithstraightbaselinesarereviewed.Severalconclusionsare drawnfromthisanalysis.Detailsofthepracticeofstatesinenclosingtheiroffshorearchipel- agoswithstraightbaselinesaresetoutintheappendix. Offshorearchipelagos The Arbitral Award speaks in terms of “offshore archipelagos.” This term is used in the Award to describe a group of islands geographically forming an archipelago belonging to a coastal or island state. This is in contrast to the definition of “archipelagic State” in Article 46ofPartIVoftheLOSConvention,whichreadsasfollows: ForthepurposesofthisConvention: (a)“archipelagicState”meansaStateconstitutedwhollybyoneormorearchipelagosand mayincludeotherislands; (b)“archipelago” means a group of islands, including parts of islands, interconnecting waters and other natural features which are so closely interrelated that such islands, watersandothernaturalfeaturesformanintrinsicgeographical,economicandpoliti- calentity,orwhichhistoricallyhavebeenregardedassuch. Article 46 thus limits the scope of the archipelagic regime to independent archipelagic states, of which there are less than two dozen today. Accordingly, in this paper, “offshore archipelagos,”whicharenotindependent“archipelagicstates,”arereferredtoas“isused”to distinguishthemfrom“archipelagicstates.” Doestheconventionpermittheuseofstraightbaselinestoencloseoffshore archipelagos? Article5,NormalBaseline,oftheLOSConventionprovides: Except where otherwise provided in this Convention, the normal baseline for measuring the breadthoftheterritorialseaisthelow-waterlinealongthecoastasmarkedonlarge-scalecharts officiallyrecognizedbythecoastalState. The introductory phrase “except where otherwise provided in this Convention” is taken fromtheintroductoryphraseofArticle3ofthe1958TerritorialSeaConventiononthenor- mal baseline, which reads “except where otherwise provided in these articles.”2 This phrase correspondstoArticle4oftheILCdraftarticleonthenormalbaseline,whichreads“subject totheprovisionsofArticle5andtotheprovisionsregardingbaysandislands.”3Thetextual changestothisintroductoryclausebetween1956and1982weremerelydraftingchangesto reflectotherdevelopmentsinthetreatytext. AsArticle121(2)oftheLOSConventionprovidesthatthemaritimezonesofislands“are determined in accordance with the provisions of this Convention applicable to other land OCEANDEVELOPMENT&INTERNATIONALLAW 3 territory,”Article7straightbaselinesmaybeemployedinlocalitiesonindividualislandsofa offshorearchipelagothatmeettheapplicablegeographiccriteriainArticle7. The introductory phrase “except where otherwise provided in this Convention” also meansthatthefinalpreambularparagraphoftheConventionthat“mattersnotregulatedby thisConventioncontinuetobegovernedbytherulesandprinciplesofgeneralinternational law”4doesnotapplytothebaselineregimessetoutintheConvention,exceptArticle10(6) onhistoricbaysandmulti-statebaysnotincludedinArticle10(1).5 Accordingly,claimsthataseparatecustomaryinternationallawrulepermitsthedrawing of straight baselines around offshore archipelagos are without a basis in law.6 The analysis thatfollowselaboratesonthisconclusion. NegotiatinghistoryofLOSConventionarticle46 While it is true that the LOS Convention does not address offshore archipelagos,7 that was theresultofalackofconsensusontheissueattheThirdConferenceontheLawoftheSea (UNCLOSIII). ThenegotiatinghistoryofArticle46, definingtheterm“archipelagicState,” whichledtothatoutcome,isdescribednext. During the 1974 session of the conference, a number of states wished the archipelagic regime nowinPartIV oftheConventionto applytooffshorearchipelagos.8Ecuadorwasa primeproponentforthisregimetobeappliedtotheGalapagos,asithadbeenin1971.9Dur- ing the same session other states, both archipelagic and coastal states, disagreed and pro- posedthattheregimeapplyonlytoarchipelagicstates.10 Given thesecompeting views,the1974MainTrendsworkingpaperof theSecondCom- mitteeonarchipelagosnecessarilyprovidedtwoalternateformulationsfortheapplicationof the provisions on archipelagos. Formula A would apply the regime only to archipelagic states;FormulaBwouldalsoapplytheregimetooffshorearchipelagos.11 AtthethirdsessionofUNCLOSIIIin1975,theInformalSingleNegotiatingText(ISNT)contin- uedtopresenttwoalternateformulations.12However,atthefourthsessionin1976,followingfur- ther informal negotiations, the Revised Single Negotiating Text (RSNT) omitted the provision applying the archipelagic regime to offshore archipelagos.13 The Virginia Commentary suggests “somedecisionhadbeenreachedregardingthestatusofoceanicarchipelagobelongingtocontinen- talStates.”14TheIntroductiontoPartIVintheVirginiaCommentaryismoredirect:Droppingthis provision“reflectedtheagreementwhichhadbeenreachedthattheconceptofanarchipelagicState wouldonlybeappliedtoStatescomposedofoceanicarchipelagos,nottoarchipelagosbelongingto acontinentalState.”15TheCommentarycorrectlynotesthatnosimilarprovisionapplyingthearchi- pelagicregimetooffshorearchipelagos“wasincludedinanysubsequenttext.”16 Statepractice In the portion of the Arbitral Award quoted at the beginning of this paper, the Tribunal’s referencetostatepracticewasaconclusion.TheAwarddidnotexplainhowitarrivedatits conclusion, although it may have drawn on the Philippines’ written answer to Question 16 posedbytheTribunalonDecember16,2014,whichreadsasfollows:17 The Philippines isinvited to address whether, asa matter of international law,anarchipelago not pertaining to an Archipelagic State (as defined by Article 46 of the Convention) may be 4 J.A.ROACH subjecttoasystemofstraightbaselinessurroundingthearchipelagoasawhole.ThePhilippines islikewiseinvitedtoaddresswhethertheSpratlyIslandsmaybesuchanarchipelagopursuant totheapplicationoftheConvention,ofhistoricrightsortitles,orofgeneralinternationallaw. ThePhilippinesansweredthesetwoquestionsasfollows: …anarchipelagonotpertainingtoanArchipelagicState(asdefinedbyArticle46oftheCon- vention)maybesubjecttoasystemofstraightbaselinessurroundingthearchipelagoasawhole, butonlyifitconformstothecriteriaforemployingstraightbaselinessetoutinArticle7ofthe 1982Convention. …theSpratlyIslandsarenotsuch anarchipelagopursuanttotheapplication oftheConven- tion, of historic rights or titles, or of general international law. There is no basis for drawing straight baselines around the Spratlys as a whole, nor have China or the Philippines applied their respective systems of straight baselines and archipelagic baselines to the Spratly Islands. Nor has Viet Nam, which claims sovereignty over all of the Spratly features, endeavoured to applyasystemofstraightbaselinestothem.18 Accordingly, this section lists state practice of enclosing offshore archipelagos with straightbaselines(claimsandprotests)thatisinthepublicdomain,thedetailsofwhichare setoutintheappendix. ThisstatepracticeincludesmeasurestakenpriortotheLOSConventionbyDenmarkfor the Faroes in 1963 (revised in 1976 and 2002), Norway for Svalbard in 1970 (amended in 2001), Ecuador for the Galapagos in 1971 (repeated in 2012), Spain for the Canary Islands in1977,andFrancefortheKerguelenIslandsin1978. ClaimsmadeaftertheadoptionoftheConventionincludeGuinea-BissauandCanada,theUnited KingdomfortheTurksandCaicosandtheFalklandsin1989,ArgentinafortheMalvinasin1991, ChinaforHainanIslandin1992andfortheParacelsin1996,FranceforGuadeloupein1999and fortheLoyaltyIslandsin2002,MyanmarforCoCoandPeparisIslandsin2008,andChinaforDia- oyuDao(SenkakuIslands)in2012anda2016claimoftherighttodosoaroundtheSpratlys. For ease of reference, Table 1 lists these claims, where they may be found and where they havebeenanalyzed,andanypubliclyavailablereactionsbystatesorpubliciststothoseclaims. As canbe seenfrom thistable, sixof the15 claimsto encloseoffshore archipelagoshave beenprotestedbyninestates,allbutoneofwhicharepartytotheLOSConvention.Several claims are by states that lost in their effort at UNCLOS III to have the archipelagic regime applytooffshorearchipelagos. This practice forms the basis for the argument that such practice may be or is becoming customary international law. However, those making that argument fail to acknowledge a number of relevant counter factors: opposition to such claims by state parties as well as the UnitedStates,19andthecontrarypracticebystateswithoffshorearchipelagos.Anumberof states with offshore archipelagos have not sought to enclose them with straight baselines, suchastheUnitedStateswithregardtoHawaii,IndiawithregardtotheAndamanandNic- obar Islands, and Spain with regard to the Belearic Islands. (It is notable that at UNCLOS III, India and Spain both supported permitting offshore archipelagos to be enclosed with straight baselines.) Other states that have enclosed their offshore archipelagos with straight baselines haveneverthelessprotestedtheclaimsof others,suchas bySpain(whichencloses its Canary Islands with straight baselines) with regard to Ecuador’s 2012 reiteration of its claim to enclose the Galapagos with straight baselines, as described in paragraph 3 of the Appendix. OCEANDEVELOPMENT&INTERNATIONALLAW 5 Table1. Offshorearchipelagosenclosedbystraightbaselines. Feature State/date Analysis Reaction Date Faroes Denmark LIS13 UnitedStates 1991 1959 LIS13 PrescottandSchofield,p. 141;Kopela,pp.126, 195–200 1963:DecreeNo.156of EMC3,pp.108–109n Munavvar,p.126; April24,1963 1976:OrdinanceNo.599 Kopela,p.126 Elferfink,14IJMC,Lpp. 541,549 2002:ExecutiveOrderNo. 306, LOSBull.,No.68,pp.13– 16 Svalbard Norway1970:Royal LIS39 Kopela,p.134 Decree, September25,1970 Kopela,pp.119–120 2001:LOSBull.,Nos.46, pp.72–80; 54,p.94 Galapagos Ecuador1951Legislative LIS42;IICumulative UnitedKingdom 1951 Decree,February21, Digest,pp.1791–1792 1951 1971: LOSBull.,No.83,pp.16 UnitedStates 1951, and18 SupremeDecreeNo.959- Kopela,pp.125–126 Germany 1986,2005, A,June28,1971 2013 Kopela,p.279 Belgium,Spain,Sweden 1986 2012 ReismanandWesterman, 2013 p.156;Munavvar,p. 126;Kopela,pp.200– 207 LOSBull.,No.80,p.14 2013 CanaryIslands Spain1977 Kopela,pp.127–130 Kopela,pp.247–252 RoyalDecreeNo.2510/ 1977,Map207 Law44/2010,December 30 Kopela,p.283 KerguelenIslands France1978: Kopela,p.117 Kopela,p.117 DecreeNo.78–112(II Durante&Rodinopp. 3–4) 2015:DecreeNo.2015– 635, LOSBull.,No.89,pp.26– 27 Azores PortugalDecreeLawNo. IICumulativeDigest,pp. UnitedStates 1986 495/85,November29, 2068–2069 1985, TablesIII,IV,andV Kopela,p.131;Munavvar, p.126 Falklands UnitedKingdom1989 Kopela,pp.122–123 ReismanandWesterman, Kopela,p.276 p.163,n93;Kopela, pp.122–124 TurksandCaicos UnitedKingdom1989 Kopela,pp.132–133 Kopela,p.133 Kopelap.281 Malvinas Argentina1991 Kopela,p.122 Kopela,p.123 ActNo.23.968Annex 1at9–11Maps H-410,H-411 Kopela,p.277 (Continuedonnextpage) 6 J.A.ROACH Table1. (Continued) Feature State/date Analysis Reaction Date Hainan,Paracels China1992, LIS117,pp.7–8 UnitedStates 1996 1996 LOSBull.,No.38, UnitedStates,Philippines, 1996 pp.54–55 Vietnam Kopela,p.288 Vietnam 1998 Kopela,pp.138–139 Guadeloupe France1999 Kopela,p.124 Kopela,p.124 Decree99–324,article2, Kopela,p.278 LoyaltyIslands France2002 Kopela,p.134 Kopela,p.134 NewCaledonia LOSBull.,No.53, pp.58–64,66;Kopela, p.285 CoCoandPreparis MyanmarLawNo.8/2008 LOSBull.,No.70,p.61 Bangladesh 2009 Islands LOSBull.,No.69,pp. Kopela,pp.136–137 69–71;Kopela,p.286 DiaoyuDao/Senkaku China2012 2013Digest,pp.369–370 UnitedStates 2013 Islands LOSBull.,No.80,pp. Roach,ASILInsight 30–31 TheresponsebythePhilippinestotheTribunal’squestionregardinggeneralinternational lawaddressedsomeofthesepoints,asfollows(mostfootnotesomitted): 16.17.Theobjectionstothisargumentareasobviousastheyarecompelling.First,itissimply inconsistentwiththe1982Convention.TheConventiondoesnotleavethematteropenforfur- therdevelopment:itregulatesitdefinitively.20Article5providesthat“Exceptwhereotherwise provided in this Convention, the normal baseline for measuring the breadth of the territorial seaisthelow-waterlinealongthecoastasmarkedonlarge-scalechartsofficiallyrecognizedby thecoastalstate”.Thedrawingofstraightbaselinesis“otherwiseprovided”forinArticles7,9, 10,and46[sic]oftheConvention.Unlessthedrawingofstraightbaselinescanbejustifiedby referencetooneormoreofthoseprovisions,thenormalbaselinereferredtoinArticle5applies. AnythingelseiscontrarytotheConvention. 16.18.Second,asnotedearlier,theextensionofarchipelagicstatustooffshoreoceanicarchipel- agoswasdiscussedatUNCLOSIIIandrejected.ThelimitationofPartIVtoarchipelagicStates waspartoftheconsensuspackagedeal.ItisnotopentoStatesPartiestoderogateunilaterally from the Convention’s agreed terms. The regime of straight baselines and archipelagic waters setoutinPartsIIandIVofUNCLOShasnotbeenamendedbytheStatesParties;itisnotthe subjectofanyimplementingagreement;therearenorelevantUNGeneralAssemblyresolutions orinformalunderstandingsoftheStatesParties;therearenointerseagreementsdealingwith thematter. 16.19. Third, even if it could be accepted (but only for the sake of argument) that State practice could in theory evolve into customary law displacing provisions of the Conven- tion, a change of this kind cannot be brought about unilaterally, any more than Iceland could change treaty provisions on fisheries jurisdiction unilaterally. It would require, if not the agreement of other States, then at least their tacit consent or acquiescence. There is no such tacit consent or acquiescence to any extension of the archipelagic waters regime. Inter alia, the US, UK, and Germany have protested at the straight baselines drawn around the Galapagos Islands. The US, Philippines and Viet Nam have protested the straight baselines China has drawn around the Paracels. The US has also objected to straight baselines drawn around the Faroe Islands and the Azores. At the same time, the OCEANDEVELOPMENT&INTERNATIONALLAW 7 United States has conspicuously refrained from drawing straight baselines around the Hawaiian Islands; France has similarly not done so around Polynesia [author’s note: but has done so around the Kerguelen, Loyalty, and Guadeloupe islands]. 16.20.Fourth,thepracticeofStateswhichhavedrawnstraightbaselinesaroundoffshorearchi- pelagos is not sufficiently consistent, uniform or widespread to establish customary interna- tional law on the subject. On the contrary, the contours of the alleged rule are fundamentally uncertain. Is it an expression of the requirements of Article 7? Or of Article 47? Or of some m(cid:1)elangeofthetwo?Orisitstricterthaneitherofthoseprovisions?Orlessstrict?Orjustdiffer- ent? Without some authoritative articulation of the rule, State practice alone is not capable of expressingconsistentnormativecontent.Moreover,ifthepracticeofnon-partiesisconsidered significant, then it supports the consensus agreed at UNCLOS III, not the evolution of some newrule. 16.21. Fifth, if on the other hand we interpret the practice of the States using straight baselines around offshore archipelagos as largely confined to groups of closely linked islands, where not much ocean space is enclosed, and sea routes normally used for inter- national navigation are not affected, then it is clear that the Spratly Islands would fall out- side any such rule on all three counts. The features which might be used as archipelagic basepoints are tiny and widely dispersed. There is simply no scenario where a series of straight baselines could cordon off a maritime area whose water/land ratio is anywhere near 9:1. The total land area for the entire Spratly Island region is less than 4 square kilo- metres, which means that any straight baseline system could only enclose within these fea- tures a total of 36 square kilometres of water—less than the territorial sea to which the high-tide features are already entitled. Moreover, the South China Sea, including the area straddled by the Spratlys, is a major international shipping lane, not a remote area of unused ocean. Preventing the enclosure of areas of this kind was exactly the reason for the opposition of maritime States to extending the archipelagic waters regime to offshore archipelagos. In addition to these points made by the Philippines, it would be inaccurate to con- clude from the lack of public protest of certain claims noted in Table 1 that states have necessarily acquiesced in those claims, as some have written.21 In the experience of this author, most diplomatic correspondence of this sort is most frequently conveyed through private or classified channels, both informally and formally, and is not made public. It may also be noted that many states will not protest unless and until their national interests are directly affected.22 Therefore, in the absence of further evidence, one does not know to which additional claims, if any, there has been opposition or acquiescence, and thus it would be incorrect to assume acquiescence merely on the basis of failure to object publicly.23 PossiblestraightbaselinesenclosingtheNanshaIslands(Spratlys) Inthe2016AwardinthePhilippines/Chinaarbitration,theArbitralTribunaladdressedthe possibilityofChinadrawingstraightarchipelagicbaselinesintheSpratlys: 573. … China’s statements could also be understood as an assertion that the Spratly Islands shouldbeenclosedwithinasystemofarchipelagicorstraightbaselines,surroundingthehigh- tidefeaturesofthegroup,andaccordedanentitlementtomaritimezonesasasingleunit.With this, the Tribunal cannot agree. The use of archipelagic baselines (a baseline surrounding an archipelagoasawhole)isstrictlycontrolledbytheConvention,whereArticle47(1)limitstheir use to “archipelagic states”. Archipelagic States are defined in Article 46 as States “constituted 8 J.A.ROACH whollybyoneormorearchipelagosandmayincludeotherislands.”ThePhilippinesisanarchi- pelagic State (being constituted wholly by an archipelago), is entitled to employ archipelagic baselines,anddidsoinpromulgatingthebaselinesforitsterritorialsea.China,however,iscon- stituted principally by territory on the mainland of Asia and cannot meet the definition of an archipelagicState. 574. In any event, however, even the Philippines could not declare archipelagic baselines sur- rounding the Spratly Islands. Article 47 of theConvention limits theuse of archipelagic base- linestocircumstanceswhere“withinsuchbaselinesareincludedthemainislandsandanarea inwhichtheratiooftheareaofthewatertotheareaoftheland,includingatolls,isbetween1 to1and9to1.”TheratioofwatertolandintheSpratlyIslandswouldgreatlyexceed9:1under anyconceivablesystemofbaselines.24 In response to this possibility, in December 2016 the United States delivered a note ver- bale to China referring to China’s three July 12–13, 2016, statements reacting to the Tribunal’s award regarding the maritime zonal entitlements of its claimed features in the SouthChinaSea.25ReferringtoparagraphIIIoftheChinesegovernmentstatementandpar- agraph70oftheChinesewhitepaper,thenotestated: …totheextentChina’sclaimto“internalwaters”contemplateswaterswithinstraightbaselines aroundanySouthChinaSeaisland,theUnitedStatesobjectsforreasonsincludingbutnotlim- ited to those set forth in … Limits in the Seas #117 … Consistent with international law as reflected in the Law of the Sea Convention, including Articles 5, 7, 46, and 47, China cannot claimstraightorarchipelagicbaselinesintheParacelIslands,PratasIsland,MaccelesfieldBank, ScarboroughReef,ortheSpratlyIslands. Similarly,China’sclaimsrelatedtowhatitcalls“NanhaiZhudao(theSouthSeaIslands)”and to “Dongsha Qundao (the Dongsha Islands), Xisha Qundao (the Xisha Islands), Zhongsha Qundao (Zhongsha Islands) and Nansha Qundao (the Nansha Islands)” would be unlawful to theextenttheyareintendedtoincludeanymaritimeclaimbasedongroupingmultipleislands together as a single unit for purposes of establishing internal waters, territorial sea, contiguous zone,exclusiveeconomiczoneandcontinentalshelforanyothermaritimeclaim. Moreover,MacclesfieldBankisanentirelysubmergedfeature;itandotherfeaturesinthe South China Sea that are not “islands” as reflected in Article 121(1) of the Law of the Sea Conventionarenotsubjecttoappropriationanddonotgenerateanyentitlementtoaterri- torialsea,contiguouszone,exclusiveeconomiczoneorcontinentalshelfundertheinterna- tionallawofthesea.26 Notwithstanding the foregoing, China has continued to assert its right under customary international law to enclose the Spratlys with straight baselines and has been supported by scholarswhosewritingsarediscussedinthenextsection. Writingssupportingtherighttodrawstraightbaselinesenclosingoffshore archipelagos There areatleastninescholars(eightofwhomaremainlandChinese)whohavesupported China’srighttodrawstraightbaselinesenclosingtheSpratly(Nansha)Islands:JiangLiand Zhang Jie; Jia Nan; Hong Nong, Li Jianwei, and Chen Pingping; Zhang Hua; Chris Whormseley;andYuxiaoHan.Theirarticlesarediscussedchronologicallyinthissection. Perhapsthefirstarticletoexaminethequestionofwhetherthearchipelagicregimecould be applied in the South China Sea was a co-authored article published in 2010, “A OCEANDEVELOPMENT&INTERNATIONALLAW 9 PreliminaryAnalysisoftheApplicationofArchipelagicRegimeandtheDelimitationofthe SouthChinaSea.”27AfterexaminingthenegotiatinghistoryofArticle46,LiandJiecorrectly concludethat“thearchipelagicregimewasexcludedfromapplyingtothemid-oceanarchi- pelagos,”thatis,offshorearchipelagos.However,theseauthorsthenstatethat“[n]eitherthe legislativeprocessnorthespecificprovisionsoftheConventiongiveaclearindicationasto the legal status” of offshore archipelagos and that so far “no final conclusion on this issue has been made in the circle of the international maritime law” (page 171). After explaining theviewsofscholarsproandcononthisissue,theauthorsconcludethatwhilethearchipe- lagicregime cannotbeappliedtooffshorearchipelagos,theregimeofstraightbaselinescan beappliedtothemasawhole,andalsotothefourgroupsofislandsintheSouthChinaSea, relying on the practice of states that have done so (pages 174–185). This article does take accountofoppositiontothosestates’claimsandcontrarystatepractice. A second article, “On the Outlying Archipelagos of Continental States,” appeared in 2012.28 Jia Nan continues the theme that the regime concerning offshore archipelagos “remains unsettled,” treating offshore archipelagos as separate categories of archipelagos (coastalandmid-ocean).Henotesthattheuncertaintycontinues“tothisday,duetodiverg- ingstatepracticesandvarioustheoriesofpublicists”(page45).Hereviewsstatepracticeand the views of publicists separately for each of his categories of offshore archipelagos (pages 46–56) and concludes straight baselines can be used to enclose “outlying” (mid-ocean) off- shorearchipelagos(page57).Jia’sarticlesuffersfromthesamedeficienciesasthefirstarticle discussedinthepreceding,inparticularhisrecognitionof“divergingstatepractices”under- cutsclaimsforanew,permissive,customarylawrule. In 2013 a third and more detailed analysis appeared in the co-authored article, “The ConceptofArchipelagicStateandtheSouthChinaSea:UNCLOS,StatePracticeandImpli- cation.”29AfterrecountingtheexistingarchipelagicstatesregimeinPartIVoftheConven- tion,andbrieflyreviewingthenegotiationsoverwhethertoincludeoffshorearchipelagosin thearchipelagicstateregime,theauthorsrelyonthefactthat“thefinalversionofUNCLOS leaves the issue out,” asserting that there are “no provisions clearly stating what principles should be applied to oceanic archipelagos of continental States in regard to their baselines, their maritimezones andrelevantjurisdictionalmechanisms” (page220).The authorscon- cedethatthenegotiatinghistorydemonstratesthattherewasadeliberatedecisionintheSec- ond Committee and the Conference to apply the archipelagic state regime only to independentarchipelagicstatesmeetingthecriteriainArticle46.TheauthorspointtoChi- neseandotherAsianscholarswhosupportthisconclusion,whilesummarizingthepositions ofotherChinesescholarswhodisagree(page222). Further,theseauthors,likethosebeforethem,donotmentiontheconstraintsimposedby Article5,NormalBaseline,tolimitallrelevantbaselineprovisionstothosecontainedinthe Convention.Inaddition,nomentionismadeofArticle121(2),whichprovidesthatthemar- itimezonesofislands(otherthanrocks)“aredeterminedinaccordancewiththeprovisions of[the]Conventionapplicabletootherlandterritory.” The authors draw support for their argument to apply straight baselines to China’s fea- tures in the South China Sea from a lengthy description of the practice of Ecuador (Galapagos),Denmark(FaroeIslands),Norway(Svalbard),Spain(CanaryIslands),andPor- tugal (Azores) (pages 223–237). The authors fail to take note of the opposition to those claimsandthecontrarypracticedescribedearlierinthispaper(inthefifthsection)thatwas publicly available at the time of writing of their article. Similarly, the description of China’s 10 J.A.ROACH practice in using (only)straight baselines inthe SouthChinaSea doesnot mentionopposi- tiontotheirusealongthemainland, HainanIsland,theParacels,andtheDiaoyuDao/Sen- kakus(pages237–239).ThepaperconcludesbyraisingthepossibilitythatChinawillapply thestraightbaselineregimetotheNansha/SpratlyandZhongsha/MaccelsfieldBank30island groups(page239). AnotherscholarsuggestingChinadrawarchipelagicstraightbaselinesintheSouthChina Sea,withoutmakingspecificreferencetotheSpratlys,wasDr.Kuen-chenFuinashortarti- cleentitled“FreedomofNavigationandChineseStraightBaselinesintheSouthChinaSea,” basedonhispresentationattheCenterforOceansLawandPolicy2013conferenceinSeoul, Republic of Korea. There, Dr. Fu, then dean of the South China Sea Institute, Xiamen Uni- versity, recounts in some detail the negotiating history in 1974–1976 of failed attempts to extend the archipelagic state regime to offshore archipelagos. After concluding it would be infeasible to amend the Convention, he suggests that the best course of action for China wouldbetoapply“theprincipleofarchipelagicwaters”unilaterallytotheParacelsandother locales in the South China Sea while delineating sea lanes “to allow foreign vessels and air- crafts to sail through and fly over the internal waters created by its straight territorial sea baselinesintheregion.”31 AfifthscholarwritingonthissubjectisZhangHua,alectureratNanjingUniversityLaw School. In 2014, he published an article (in Chinese) entitled “On the Legality of Applying StraightBaselinestoChina’sMid-OceanArchipelagos:APerspectivefromCustomaryInter- nationalLaw.”32Therearetwoweaknessestohisargument. First, while acknowledging there is no specific provision in the LOS Convention on the application of straight baselines to offshore archipelagos, his brief, one short paragraph, review of the negotiating history at UNCLOS III (page 137 of the original) merely notes someoftheproposalstopermitstraightbaselinestoencloseoffshorearchipelagos.Hethen assumesthatthematterisnotregulatedbytheConventionandtherefore“judgingthelegal- ity of this type of straight baseline naturally cannot resort to the provisions of UNCLOS” (page 138). He then asserts that the legal basis for applying straight baselines to offshore archipelagos “originates from customary international law, andis ‘sui generis’…and natu- rallycannotbecomparedwithnormalstraightbaselinesandarchipelagicstraightbaselines” (pages 139, 141). He fails to consider the full history recounted earlier in this paper (in the fourthsection)andtheeffectoftheintroductoryphrasetoArticle5“exceptwhereotherwise providedinthisConvention”discussedinthepreceding(thirdsection). Second, his recount of and reliance on state practice are incomplete and unconvinc- ing. He describes 12 of the claims in Table 1, but mentions only the U.S. reactions to those claims. He fails to acknowledge protests by others, all state parties, identified in the preceding and detailed in the appendix, as well as the contrary state practice described in the fifth section of this paper. He concludes that the United States is a mere “persistent objector” that cannot prevent the development of customary interna- tional law. He makes this assertion on the unproven claim that the “international soci- ety has adopted a silent attitude toward the use of straight baselines for” offshore archipelagos (page 138); as stated earlier in this paper, there is no evidence of the actions by states in nonpublic diplomatic correspondence. A sixth scholar supporting China’s right to draw straight baselines enclosing offshore archipelagos in the South China Sea is Chris Whomersley, a former deputy legal adviser in the United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office. His article “The Award on the

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Reisman and Westerman, p. 156; Munavvar, p. Preparis Islands in the Andaman Sea.75 Each set of islands is relatively far apart, with straight
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