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The USS John Finn’s transit was described by the navy as a scheduled deployment. Photo: Handout

China protests after US Navy’s latest transit through Taiwan Strait

  • The Seventh Fleet says USS John Finn’s passage was a sign of its commitment to a ‘free and open’ Indo-Pacific
  • But Beijing condemns the voyage, the third such under Joe Biden, as a ‘provocation’ that ‘sends the wrong message’
Taiwan

The US Navy has sent a warship through the sensitive Taiwan Strait, prompting an angry protest from Beijing.

The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS John Finn conducted a routine Taiwan Strait transit on Wednesday in accordance with international law, the US Seventh Fleet said in a statement.

“The ship’s transit through the Taiwan Strait demonstrates the US commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.

“The US military will continue to fly, sail and operate anywhere international law allows,” said the statement, which included photos of the warship sailing through the narrow waterway that separates the mainland and the self-ruled island.

According to the US Seventh Fleet, the John Finn, part of the Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group, was on a scheduled deployment in the fleet’s area of operations.

Chinese military in South China Sea landing drill as Taiwan tension persists

Photos released by the fleet also showed an MH-60R Sea Hawk helicopter practising take-offs and landings on the destroyer’s flight deck.

It was the third such transit conducted by the Seventh Fleet since the Biden administration took office.

On Thursday, Taiwan’s defence ministry confirmed the passage of the ship, saying it had headed south after sailing through the Taiwan Strait.

The People’s Liberation Army, however, denounced the transit as “deliberate showing off” and a “provocation” that served only to undermine regional and cross-strait stability.

“The US ship’s passage sent a wrong message,” said Senior Colonel Zhang Chunhui.

The US Navy released pictures of a helicopter taking off and landing on the deck during the passage. Photo: Handout

Beijing considers Taiwan a wayward province that must be returned to its control, by force if necessary. It regards US transits through the Taiwan Strait as a sign of support for the island and a challenge to its sovereignty.

“Such [actions] serve not only to disrupt the regional situation but also endanger stability in the Taiwan Strait, which we resolutely oppose,” Zhang said, adding the PLA would maintain a high level of alertness and respond to all threats and provocations at all times.

Local news media reported that Taiwanese and PLA warplanes and ships shadowed the American destroyer.

The US also sent warplanes, including P-3 Orion submarine-hunting aircraft, to carry out operations in the South China Sea.

According to the Seventh Fleet, US warships transited the waterway 13 times in 2020.

Taiwan issue, risk of conflict loom large for Beijing’s political elite

The latest transit is the third since Joe Biden was sworn in as US president in January, with two others being carried out on February 4 and February 24 – a sign Taiwanese media and authorities have interpreted as a continuation of former president Donald Trump’s support for the island.

“I worry that they’re accelerating their ambitions to supplant the United States and our leadership role in the rules-based international order … by 2050,” he told a US Senate armed services committee hearing on Tuesday.

“Taiwan is clearly one of their ambitions before that. And I think the threat is manifest during this decade, in fact, in the next six years,” he warned.

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