Published on 01/27/2021 – Last Updated on 01/27/2021 by OTC
According to Sputnik News of Russia, the Chinese Armed Forces will conduct drills in the South China Sea later this week, the country’s Maritime Safety Administration said on Tuesday, declining to elaborate on the exact date and on what scale the exercises will be carried out.
The administration, however, issued a notice to ban entry into a portion of the waters in the Gulf of Tonkin east of Vietnam on 27-30 January.
This is not conducive to peace and stability in the region”, the spokesman pointed out.
The statement followed the US Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) announcing late last week that a US aircraft carrier strike group led by the USS Theodore Roosevelt had entered the South China Sea on 23 January “to conduct routine operations”.
The developments come amid ongoing regional tensions over South China Sea territories, which apart from Beijing are claimed by an array of countries, including the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan, and Vietnam.
Despite having no claims to the territories, the US is also actively engaged in the dispute, repeatedly sending its military vessels to the South China Sea to fulfill “freedom of navigation” missions. They draw harsh criticism from Beijing who describes such acts as “provocations” and is often involved in holding war games in the area.
The post China to hold drills to response T.Roosevelt CSG’s deployment in the South China Sea appeared first on Naval News.
Comments