Beijing announces “combat patrols” in South China Sea on Sunday

(Beijing) China announced that it would carry out “combat patrols” on Sunday in the disputed South China Sea, where joint maneuvers by the Philippines, the United States, Japan and the United States are to take place on the same day. ‘Australia.


“On April 7, the Southern Theater Command of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army is organizing joint naval and air combat patrols in the South China Sea,” the military said in a statement.

“All military activities that disrupt the situation in the South China Sea and create hot spots are under control,” the statement added, in an apparent allusion to other countries’ exercises in the same waters.

No details were provided on the nature and exact location of the Chinese maneuvers.

On Saturday, the Philippines, the United States, Japan and Australia announced that they would hold joint naval and air exercises in the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone on Sunday.

The four countries stressed, in a joint statement, that this will demonstrate the “collective commitment” of the allies “to strengthen regional and international cooperation in favor of a free and open Indo-Pacific region”.

A trilateral summit between US President Joe Biden, his Philippine counterpart Ferdinand Marcos and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is scheduled for April 11 at the White House.

The naval exercises and summit come after several skirmishes between Chinese and Filipino ships near atolls off the Philippines in recent months.

Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, including waters and islands near the coasts of several neighboring countries, despite an international court ruling ruling against it in 2016.

Senior US officials have repeatedly affirmed America’s “ironclad” commitment to defending the Philippines in the South China Sea in the event of an armed attack.

At the same time, the Philippines and Japan began talks on a defense pact that would allow both countries to deploy troops in each other’s territories. Manila has already reached a similar agreement with Australia and the United States.


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