Jill Goldenziel, an expert in international law and geostrategy at the National Defense University in the United States, warned that in recent years, more and more Chinese space rocket wreckage has fallen in various corners of the world, bringing unpredictable risks to the world.

(Taken from the Internet) (Photo by reporter Lu Yongshan)

[Compilation of Lu Yongshan/Comprehensive Report] Jill Goldenziel, an expert in international law and geostrategy at the National Defense University of the United States, published a comment in Forbes magazine on December 26, warning that there are more and more Chinese space rocket wreckage in recent years The crash in the exclusive economic zone of the Philippines has continued to intensify the conflict between Beijing and Manila, and has brought unpredictable risks to the world. We call on the United States to support the Philippines, ask China to abide by international law in the South China Sea, and properly manage space debris to protect the earth on security.

Gordon Zill said in the article that on December 17, the Philippine Coast Guard discovered fragments of a Chinese space rocket in the exclusive economic zone. This is the third such incident in the past two months.

In the November 20th incident, the Chinese Coast Guard and the Philippine Navy even confronted each other. The Philippines subsequently condemned China’s illegal actions and lodged a diplomatic protest with the Chinese embassy in the Philippines on December 12th. This is one of 189 protests against Beijing this year. China's actions have violated the "International Maritime Law". Fortunately, no one was injured in the incident.

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Gordon Ziel pointed out that China's aggressive behavior in the South China Sea, including the deployment of ships in areas with oil and natural gas, and the suspected construction of new illegal artificial islands, such actions "are designed to slowly erode the sovereignty of the Philippines and damage its strategic position. ".

Beijing has shown that it can assert and act with impunity in the Philippines' exclusive economic zone, even using it as a dumping ground for space junk.

Chinese rocket debris rains down on villages in Africa, causing Spain to scramble to close airspace, creating risks around the world, writes Gordon Ziel Safety.

"The United States must do more to promote the rule of law in the South China Sea and beyond," she said. "The United States must support its allies as the Philippines strengthens its military presence in its exclusive economic zone in response to recent events."

Gordon Ziel also stressed that the U.S. must promote international efforts to hold countries accountable for space junk and make Chinese rocket launches safer; otherwise, there will be more rockets in the Philippines' exclusive economic zone as China ramps up its space program debris, leading to more conflict in the South China Sea.

China's Long March 5B carrier rocket carrying the "Wentian" experimental module fell back to the earth over the Indian Ocean on July 30 this year. The Malaysian Space Agency detected that the rocket wreckage caught fire when it entered the atmosphere, and finally landed in Northeast Borneo. Sulu Sea.

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) criticized at the time that China did not release the trajectory of the rocket wreckage, which was "pretty irresponsible and dangerous."