China Carrier Steams Towards Disputed South China Sea For Drills
(REUTERS 26 NOV 13)
BEIJING–China sent its sole aircraft carrier on a training mission into the South China Sea on Nov. 26 amid maritime disputes with the Philippines and other neighbors and tension over its plan to set up an airspace defense zone in waters disputed with Japan.
The Liaoning, bought used from Ukraine and refurbished in China, has conducted more than 100 exercises and experiments since it was commissioned last year but this is the first time it has been sent to the South China Sea.
The Liaoning left port from the northern city of Qingdao accompanied by two destroyers and two frigates, the Chinese navy said on an official news website.
While there, it will carry out “scientific research, tests and military drills,” the report said.
“This is the first time since the Liaoning entered service that it has carried out long-term drills on the high seas,” it added.
The timing of the drills is bound to raise eyebrows with its neighbors, given the overlapping maritime disputes.
China has lodged formal protests with the United States and Japan after both criticized its plan to impose new rules on airspace over disputed waters in the East China Sea.
On Nov. 26, Australia said it had summoned China’s ambassador to express concern over its imposition of the Air Defense Identification Zone.
China also claims almost the entire oil- and gas-rich South China Sea, conflicting with claims from Taiwan, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Vietnam.
That dispute is one of the region’s biggest flashpoints amid China’s military build-up and the U.S. strategic “pivot” back to Asia.
Though considered decades behind U.S. technology, the Liaoning represents the Chinese navy’s blue-water ambitions and has been the focus of a campaign to stir patriotism.
The navy did not specify exactly what training would be done, only noting that previous exercises involving aircraft landing and taking off had gone well.
Previously reported training exercises have mostly been in the Yellow Sea, between China and the Korean peninsula.
“Obviously the Chinese authorities have been adopting a series of measures to strengthen their claim on the sovereignty of the disputed territories,” said Joseph Cheng, a political science professor at City University of Hong Kong.
“You see Japan and Southeast Asian countries have also been making gestures and taking steps to strengthen sovereignty, so China has to respond.”
The navy said the mission was routine, adding that the Liaoning was still in a testing phase.
“This test visit to the South China Sea is part of normal arrangements for testing and training for the Liaoning,” it said. “…Long cross-sea voyages are a necessary stage of experimentation and training to test equipment and troops under continuous work and different hydrological and meteorological conditions.”
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