Experts rated nearly 300 Chinese vessels present in the South China Sea to use the quantitative advantage to put pressure on the Southeast Asian neighbors.

The patrol force belonging to the Filipino East Sea Group said that it is on May 9, 287 Chinese "marine militia" ships scattered at entities in the Spratly Islands of the Vietnamese sovereignty, in which the

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Photo: AP

Chinese fishing fleet anchoring at the first three-year beach in the existent island of the Spratly Islands of Vietnam in March. Photo: AP.

At the first three pm in the warehouse of the existent island of the Spratly Islands of Vietnam, the Filipino patrol force, also claiming sovereignty with this entity, finding 34 Chinese ships present.

Talking to VnExpress, Gregory Poling, Director of Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the US Strategy and International Research Center (CSIS) in the United States, says that this situation is suitable for what we have seen about how

Earlier, more than 200 Chinese vessels from March 7 anchored at the first three yards.

"This is a campaign that puts pressure on the Philippines and Vietnam officials with a huge amount of China, they want to gradually press the Southeast Asian vessels out of this waters," Poling commented further.

The Foreign Ministry spokesman Le Thi Thu Dai on May 13 said Vietnam watched closely and enforced sovereignty on the South China Sea.

In April, Philippines Defin Defin Lorenzana said China maintained the presence of marine militants who showed the "more" areas in the South China Sea.

Professor Jay L. Batongbacal at the Law School of the Filipino University, and the Director of the Institute of Maritime and Maritime Issues, Beijing's assessment has shown that they maintain the presence of vessels like one

Batongbacal indicated that China used to do this with Scarborough shutters and James shutters, by giving the charming week to build constantly in those locations, refusing to leave, guarding when their fishermen fishing fishing

Experts identify the presence of nearly 300 Chinese seawalkers in the South China Sea are a reminder of the "cow's tongue" booklet unilaterally set out to claim sovereignty with most of the South China Sea area.

He mentioned in early May, President Philippines Duterte caused a stir when it argued that the Permanent Court of Permanent Arbitious Arbitious Arbitration, in which China's love

"Duterte's comment has lowered a lot of hard tones with China that his top diplomats and defense officials have given," Custodio said.

Dr. Collin Koh Swee Lean in S. Rajaratnam International Research School, Singapore (RSIs), also in the same view.