China Continues Constructing 5th Base Near South Pole
Beijing is undergoing the “most significant” expansion of its footprint in Antarctica after new satellite images revealed the communist regime was resuming construction on a fifth polar station.
A Washington-based think tank believes the new station, located on Inexpressible Island near the Ross Sea, could double as a spying operation.
“While essential for tracking and communicating with China’s growing array of scientific satellites, ground stations can support intelligence collection,” the report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies said.
“Importantly, the station’s position may enable it to collect signals intelligence from U.S.-allied Australia and New Zealand and could collect telemetry data on rockets launching from newly established space facilities in both countries.”
The CSIS says Beijing has faced more challenges in establishing a footprint in the northern Arctic and, instead, has a “freer hand” to explore the south pole.
While the U.S. still maintains the largest presence on the continent, Beijing’s presence is expanding rapidly. It currently has four stations (all to be expanded), including the Great Wall, Taishan, Kunlun, and Zhongshan Stations.
![Epoch Times Photo](https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2023/04/19/id5205152-Screenshot-2023-04-19-133137-370x350.jpg)
“The Zhongshan Station’s assets could be leveraged to collect intelligence on foreign militaries in the Indian Ocean, including on the joint U.S.-UK Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia. It could also play a support role in monitoring India’s developing naval forces operating in the region.”
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has maintained its frequent expeditions to Antarctica are for research purposes only.
However, the U.S. Department of Defense has said the CCP’s strategy is to develop “dual-use technologies, facilities, and scientific research,” all aimed at improving the capabilities of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.
These research stations could also be reference positions for Beijing’s answer to the U.S.-run global positioning system, the BeiDou satellite network.
“There’s absolutely no reason why Antarctica would be immune from this doctrine,” Anthony Bergin, senior fellow at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, previously told The Epoch Times.
“Particular technologies, particular pieces of scientific research, could be morphed into part of a bigger system. It’s not so much we would expect a direct military threat from Antarctica,” he said.
Antarctic Treaties Under Threat
The Antarctic Treaty System (ATS) established in 1961, is a key agreement governing international relations on the continent. The treaty is considered one of the most “successful sets of international agreements” because it has relied on goodwill and peaceful cooperation between nations.
In 1983, the CCP ratified the treaty, and since then, it has been steadily expanding its footprint, fishing fleets, and research expeditions to the continent.
Beijing’s role in Antarctica’s affairs has also been contentious on other fronts.
In 2022, Russia and China again blocked a proposal to establish a new conservation zone in the area during a meeting of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR).
This was the sixth year in a row that such a proposal had been blocked by either party.
“It’s this weird politicisation of science,” said Tony Press, a former CCAMLR commissioner, in an interview with Scientific American.
While the U.S. delegation was also critical.
“Frankly, it is now holding back progress. Countries that have prioritised their individual needs have weakened our ability to meet the shared conservation objectives on which this body was founded.”