Batanes Under Threat?

ChinaScoop • Is China Claiming Batanes? Ray Powell Warns of Scholar ‘Natural Extension’ Narrative
Dramatic aerial view of Batanes Islands, Philippines — rugged green hills meeting the Pacific Ocean
BREAKING • JULY 9, 2026

CHINA CLAIM
OVER BATANES?

Chinese scholars call it a “natural extension” of Taiwan.
Ray Powell says it may justify patrols east of Batanes.

SCROLL TO BEGIN
NO OFFICIAL PRC CLAIM — YET
This is classic gray-zone narrative building, according to SeaLight Director Ray Powell.
Source: Jinan University Symposium • June 30, 2026
193 km
Approx. distance from southern Batanes to Taiwan
3 islands
Main inhabited islands in Batanes province (Batan, Sabtang, Itbayat)
June 30
Date of the controversial Jinan University symposium in Guangzhou
Continuous Philippine administration
Since Spanish colonial era • Recognized internationally

The Emerging Narrative

On June 30, 2026, a group of Chinese scholars gathered at Jinan University in Guangzhou. Academics from Nanjing University, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and other institutions made a striking assertion: the Philippines’ northernmost province of Batanes constitutes a “natural geographical extension” of Taiwan.

Because Beijing maintains that Taiwan is an inalienable part of China, the scholars concluded that Batanes should also fall under Chinese sovereignty. They argued that Philippine administration “lacks historical and legal basis,” citing Ming and Qing dynasty records, navigation history, and cultural links between the Ivatan people and Taiwan’s indigenous Tao community.

Strategic Geography

Batanes sits at one of Asia’s most critical maritime chokepoints.

Strategic map showing Batanes Islands relative to Taiwan and the Bashi Channel
Illustrative map — Batanes highlighted for strategic context (actual size is much smaller)
Batanes
Taiwan

Why Batanes Matters

  • Controls southern approaches to the Bashi Channel (Luzon Strait) — a vital artery between the South China Sea and the Pacific.
  • Less than 200 km from Taiwan — within easy reach of coast guard and naval assets.
  • Part of the Philippines’ “first island chain” defense posture.
  • Recent Chinese Coast Guard activity already observed “bracketing” the islands in 2025.
POWELL’S WARNING

“This narrative could serve as a pretext to justify a Chinese presence in Batanes and complicate discussions over the area.”

— Ray Powell, SeaLight Director
Ray Powell, Director of SeaLight and maritime security expert
Ray Powell
Director, SeaLight • Stanford Gordian Knot Center
THE ANALYST

Ray Powell on the Claim

Powell, a retired U.S. Air Force Colonel and founder of the SeaLight maritime transparency initiative, was among the first to publicly highlight the symposium’s significance.

“So far PRC government officials have not endorsed the symposium’s conclusions, but that’s not unusual in PRC gray-zone narrative warfare.”

He described the event as part of Beijing’s broader “lawfare” strategy — using academic arguments and historical narratives to lay the groundwork for future operational moves.

SeaLight.live — Maritime Transparency
Stanford-affiliated

Anatomy of the Scholarly Claim

What exactly did the Chinese academics say at the June 30 symposium?

“Natural Geographical Extension”

Batanes is presented as a physical continuation of Taiwan’s landmass and continental shelf. Therefore, since Taiwan belongs to China, so does Batanes.

Historical Jurisdiction

Scholars cited Ming and Qing dynasty records claiming Taiwan (and by extension its “appurtenances”) exercised jurisdiction over the Batan Islands. They also referenced cultural ties between Ivatan and Taiwan’s Tao people.

Treaty & Legal Arguments

Reinterpretation of the 1898 Treaty of Paris and 1946 Treaty of Manila. Claim that Batanes should have been returned to China post-WWII as territory appurtenant to Taiwan.

UNCLOS Block

Argued that Japan and the Philippines cannot legally delimit maritime boundaries east of Taiwan because Taiwan lies between them — rendering recent Japan-PH summit agreements “illegal and invalid.”

Important distinction: These arguments come from academics and state-affiliated media reports. No official statement has been issued by the PRC government or Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The Gray-Zone Playbook

How scholarly narratives can pave the way for operational presence

1
May 2026
Japan–Philippines summit announces plans to negotiate maritime boundaries east of Taiwan.
2
June 30, 2026
Jinan University symposium produces the “natural extension” narrative. Reported in provincial/state media.
3
July 2026
Ray Powell amplifies the development via SeaLight analysis. Highlights potential justification for patrols.
4
Future?
Possible increase in Chinese Coast Guard “law enforcement” patrols east of Batanes or in the Bashi Channel — framed as protecting “historical waters.”
ENGAGE WITH THE STORY

Test Your Understanding

Interactive tools to explore the issue

Knowledge Quiz 5 QUESTIONS
Quick Poll

Do you think this scholarly narrative could be used to justify increased Chinese maritime patrols around or east of Batanes?

Philippine Perspective

The Philippines has exercised continuous sovereignty and administration over Batanes since the Spanish colonial period. The province is explicitly part of Philippine territory under the 1987 Constitution and has long been recognized as such by the international community.

Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. has already dismissed similar assertions as “nonsense” and “preconceived lies.”

BOTTOM LINE FROM SEALIGHT

“The narrative is circulating at the provincial level in China. While no official PRC claim exists today, these academic exercises are often the first step in building the domestic and international justification for future gray-zone operations.”

— Ray Powell
Director, SeaLight

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Sources: Manila Times, GMA News, SeaLight analysis, Jinan University symposium reporting (June–July 2026). This is an independent analytical piece.

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