“It’s no secret that China shadows and challenges ships transiting international waters on very legitimate routes,” he told The Times on July 20.
“We will respect China and we hope that China respects us … we will sail where international law allows.”
In a warning it said was being issued to the UK, Australia and Japan, the Global Times editorial stated: “We advise US allies to be particularly cautious, keep a sufficient distance from China’s red lines, and refrain from pushing ahead.
“They must be bluntly told that if their warships rampantly behave as the US military does in the South China Sea, they will more likely become an example of China defending its sovereignty and territorial integrity – just as a popular Chinese phrase indicates: To execute one as a warning to a hundred.”
It also said the “very idea of a British presence in the South China Sea is dangerous”.
“If London tries to establish a military presence in the region with geopolitical significance, it will only disrupt the status quo in the region,” it said.
“And the UK simply does not have the ability to reshape the pattern in the South China Sea. To be precise, if the UK wants to play the role of bullying China in the region, it is demeaning itself. And if there is any real action against China, it is looking for a defeat.”
The tensions come after Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said there was a global “battle for hearts and minds” to attempt to reduce China’s influence on international organisations.
Speaking in the Commons on July 6, Mr Raab said he was “very familiar with the routing” of the CSG and had discussed the deployment with his Chinese counterpart, insisting it was being done in a “confident but not confrontational” way.