South China Sea challenges series launched

The South China Morning Post launched a three-part series on February 11, 2026, examining how Beijing and its neighbors use new frameworks and diplomacy amid South China Sea disputes. The series explores evolving diplomatic and strategic tools in the region for 2026.

The South China Morning Post's series, titled 'Challenges and pathways in the South China Sea,' describes how Beijing and its neighbors are leveraging new frameworks and diplomacy to navigate competing claims and ambitions in the contested waters. Published on February 11, 2026, the three-part series explores the evolving diplomatic and strategic tools being used to reshape the South China Sea that year.

The first installment discusses why the High Seas Treaty could change the 'rules of the game' in the South China Sea row. Effective January 17, the treaty protects unique marine biodiversity and ecosystems in areas beyond any individual country's jurisdiction.

The second part examines the Philippines' ambition to seal a South China Sea code of conduct. As the 2026 Asean chair, Manila has highlighted its push to finalize the code within its term, covering the contested waters.

The series highlights ongoing dynamics in the South China Sea disputes, including diplomatic efforts and the role of international frameworks. It provides an overview of developments for 2026 without detailing specific incidents.

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Ruhanas Harun, an international relations professor at Malaysia's National Defence University, told a maritime symposium in China's Hainan province that Asean member states prefer 'quiet diplomacy' for maritime disputes, but power asymmetry makes South China Sea issues hard to resolve. Chinese analysts say Beijing supports this approach as long as sovereignty claims are settled bilaterally.

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