South China Sea: PLA stages live-fire missile drill, US Navy on Paracels patrol
- Chinese military tests response to repeated attack far offshore, state media report
- Beijing think tank says US unarmed ocean surveillance vessel has been near disputed islands since Tuesday
The Chinese military’s Southern Theatre Command conducted a live-fire drill to test its response to repeated missile attacks in a “far sea”, state broadcaster CCTV reported on Saturday without saying when or where the exercise took place.
The drill involved the guided-missile destroyer Yinchuan, guided-missile frigate Hengyang, the amphibious dock landing ship Wuzhishan, and the support ship Chagan Hu, according to the report.
The Southern Theatre Command is responsible for overseeing the vast waters claimed by China in the South China Sea.
South China Sea: the dispute that could start a military conflict
At the same time, the US has been stepping up reconnaissance activities in the area.
“USNS Impeccable is sailing around the Paracel Islands, and where is the destination? This kind of regular track points is unusual for a reconnaissance ship in this area,” the Beijing think tank said on Twitter on Friday.
South China Sea: how the US Navy aims to better home in on targets
The US also sent a reconnaissance aircraft to fly over the South China Sea off the coast of Taiwan on Saturday, the think tank said in another post.
The USNS Impeccable was at the centre of a confrontation in 2009 when the unarmed ocean surveillance vessel was shadowed by five Chinese ships off the southern island of Hainan. The incident sparked a diplomatic row between Beijing and Washington.
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China’s PLA conducts air force drills after US warships sail in contested South China Sea
Tensions have been rising between China and the US, with Beijing repeatedly protesting against US military operations in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.