They were currently on an eastward heading, cruising well north of the ninth parallel — and as far as Yin was concerned, the “neutral zone” meant that he might
“CIC to bridge,” the interphone crackled.
Captain Lubu keyed his microphone and grunted a curt, “Understood,” then checked the radar plot. The
Lubu turned to Admiral Yin. “Sir, the surface contact is near Phu Qui Island, in the neutral zone about twenty miles north of Pearson Reef. No recent reports of any vessels or structures in the area. We have
Yin nodded that he understood. Phu Qui Island, he knew, was a former Chinese oil-drilling site in the Spratly Islands; the well had been capped and abandoned years ago. Although Phu Qui Island disappeared underwater at high tide, it was a very large rock and coral formation and could easily be expanded and fortified — it would be an even larger island than Spratly Island itself. If Yin was tasked to pick an island to occupy and fortify, he would pick Phu Qui.
So might someone else…
“Send
Captain Lubu acknowledged the order and relayed the instructions to his officer of the deck for transmission to the
Yin, who had been in the People’s Liberation Army Navy practically all of his life, was proud of the instincts he’d honed during his loyal career. He trusted them. And now, somewhere deep down in his gut, those instincts told him this was going to be trouble.
Granted, Phu Qui Island, and even the Spratlys themselves, seemed the most unlikely place to expect trouble. The Spratlys — called
Centuries ago Chinese explorers had discovered that the Nansha Dao was a treasure trove of minerals — gold, iron, copper, plus traces or indications of dozens of other metals — as well as gems and other rarities.
Since the islands were right on the sea lanes between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean, the “round-eyes” eventually found them, and the English named them the Spratlys after the commander of a British warship who “discovered” them in the eighteenth century. It was the British who discovered oil in the Spratlys and began tapping it. Unfortunately, the British had not yet developed the technology to successfully and economically drill for oil in the weather-beaten islands, so the islands were abandoned for safer and more lucrative drilling sites in Indonesia and Malaysia.
As time progressed, several nations — Indonesia,
Malaysia, and the Philippines — all tried to develop the islands as a major stopover port for sea traffic. But it was following World War II that the Chinese considered the Spratlys as well as everything else in the South China Sea as their territory. *
As oil-drilling platforms, fishing grounds, and mining operations began to proliferate, the Chinese, aided by the North Vietnamese, who acted as a surrogate army for their Red friends, began vigorously patrolling the area. During the Vietnam War radar sites and radio listening posts on Spratly Island allowed the Vietcong and China to detect and monitor every vessel and aircraft heading from the Philippines to Saigon, including American B-52 bombers on strike missions into North Vietnam.