In a span of 20 minutes, 20 F/A-18 Hornet jets took off and landed on the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier, in a powerful display of military precision and efficiency.
The nuclear-powered warship, leading a carrier strike group, was on Tuesday conducting what the US military called routine training in the disputed South China Sea, headed for a port call in the Philippines, a defense treaty ally.
The US is not alone in carrying out naval patrols in the strategic waterway, where Chinese, Japanese and some Southeast Asian navies operate, possibly increasing tensions and risking accidents at sea.
Photo: AFP
“We have seen Chinese ships around us,” US Rear Admiral Steve Koehler, the strike group commander, told a small group of reporters on board the three-decade-old carrier.
“They are one of the navies that operate in the South China Sea, but I would tell you that we have seen nothing but professional work out of the ships we have encountered,” he said.
Navies in the western Pacific, including China and nine Southeast Asian countries, have been working on a code of unexpected encounters at sea to avoid conflict.
The USS Theodore Roosevelt’s presence in the South China Sea, where Taiwan also has claims, comes days after China’s massive air and naval drills in the area, in what some analysts described as an unusually large display of Beijing’s growing naval might.
The Chinese navy yesterday also released a warning to other ships on social media that they would be holding drills until tomorrow in the region south of Sanya, Hainan Province, without giving additional details.
China’s growing military presence in the waters has fueled concern in the West about Beijing’s end game.
The US has criticized China’s apparent militarization of artificial islands, and carried out regular air and naval patrols to assert its right to freedom of navigation in stretches of a sea China claims largely as its own.
“This transit in the South China Sea is nothing new in our planning cycle or in a reaction to that. It is probably by happenstance that all that is happening at the same time,” said Koehler, who gave a tour of the carrier to Philippine military officials and watched flight operations aboard the 100,000-tonne warship.
“All of the operations that we do in and around the South China Sea or any of the bodies of water we operate in, there is a function of international law and that is ultimately what we want to recognize,” Koehler said.
Tension between the US and China over trade and territory under US President Donald Trump has been stepped up of late, with fear in the region that the South China Sea, vital to global trade, could one day become a battleground between the two rival powers.
China has long objected to US military operations off its coasts, even in areas Washington insists are free to international passage.
“They [China] certainly have the right to exercise off their coast like we do, nor are they necessarily in charge of our transit cycle, but our deployment’s been planned,” Koehler said.
“It is a showcase of the capability of the US armed forces,” Philippine army chief Rolando Bautista said of the demonstration. “Since Americans are our friends in one way or another, they can help us deter any threat.”
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