The Borneo Post

China aircraft carrier battle group conducts first live-fire drills

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BEIJING: China’s Liaoning aircraft carrier battle group has conducted its first exercises with live ammunition, the country’s navy said, in a show of strength as tensions with the US and Taiwan escalate.

China’s first and only aircraft carrier led large- scale exercises in the Bohai Sea, the People’s Liberation Army Navy said late Thursday in a statement on their website.

The drills involved dozens of ships and aircraft in the carrier group and saw more than 10 airtoair, anti- ship, and air defence missiles being tested, it said.

The group also performed reconnaiss­ance exercises, tests of early-warning systems, aerial intercepti­on, and missile defence.

The goal of the exercises was to “test the performanc­e of weapons and the training level of the team”, the statement said.

China’s national broadcaste­r CCTV showed footage of J-15 fighter jets taking off from the carrier and firing missiles.

The drills come as a heated war of words intensifie­s between Beijing and US President- elect Donald Trump, who broke convention by speaking directly to Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen and even suggested Washington could jettison Washington’s decades- old ‘One China policy’.

The ‘One China policy’ is a diplomatic compromise allowing the US to do business with both China and Taiwan while only recognisin­g Beijing.

Since Trump’s and Tsai’s phone call, China has sent military aircraft close to Japanese territory near the Miyako Strait and reportedly sent a bomber to circumnavi­gate disputed territory in the resource-rich South China Sea, flights its air force has described as “routine”.

The US Pacific commander said Wednesday that the US will keep challengin­g China’s “assertive, aggressive behaviour in the South China Sea”, despite Beijing’s rapid developmen­t of artificial islands capable of hosting military planes.

Satellite images published this week by a US think tank showed structures on Chinese- built artificial islands that appeared to be large anti-aircraft guns and close-in weapons systems (CIWS) designed to take out incoming missiles and enemy aircraft, the think tank said.

China’s defence ministry said on a verified social media account that the constructi­on was mostly for civilian use, and that necessary military installati­ons were for self- defence.

“If someone were flexing his muscles outside your door, wouldn’t you get a slingshot ready?”, it wrote.

Beijing is seeking to build a “blue water” navy capable of operating in distant seas and has embarked on an extensive project to modernise its two million- strong military, the world’s largest.

The Liaoning is a secondhand Soviet ship built more than 25 years ago. It was commission­ed in 2012 after extensive refits.

In December 2015, China’s defence ministry announced the country was building a second aircraft carrier based entirely on domestic designs. — AFP

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