The Philippine Star

China tests 1st locally made aircraft carrier

- – AFP

BEIJING – China’s first domestical­ly manufactur­ed aircraft carrier started sea trials yesterday, state media said – a landmark in Beijing’s ambitious plans to modernize its navy as the Asian giant presses its claims in disputed regional waters.

The carrier, known only as “Type 001A,” set out for the trials from a port in northeaste­rn China at around 6:45 a.m., according to state broadcaste­r CCTV.

Expected to be commission­ed by 2020, the ship will give China a second aircraft carrier as it asserts its claims in the

South China Sea and seeks to deter any independen­ce movements in Taiwan.

Footage aired by CCTV showed the imposing carrier accompanie­d by several smaller military craft leaving a wharf and heading out to sea.

It is the first time the ship’s engine, propulsion and navigation systems will be tested at sea, state media said, a year after it first took to the water at its official launch.

China’s sole operationa­l aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, is a repurposed Soviet ship bought from Ukraine, which went into service in 2012.

Neither the Liaoning nor the new ship is nuclear powered, but both can carry around 40 planes and have similar “ski jump” ramps, an old launch system that forces aircraft to carry fewer weapons in order to hold more fuel for takeoff.

The possession of a homegrown aircraft carrier – which the defense ministry has said displaces 55,000 tons – places China among the few military powers with such vessels, including the United States, Russia and Britain.

But it would still be no match in size or range to the nuclear powered vessels of the United States Navy, which has 11 carriers.

China’s warships will enable it to “project its power and influence in its neighborho­od,” Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), told AFP.

Chinese state media have been speculatin­g that a third aircraft carrier is in the works, but the defense ministry has yet to confirm this.

However, even with the potential developmen­t of further carriers, it could still be years before China’s navy is able to deploy its fleet effectivel­y, said Tsang.

“With the Chinese carriers substantia­lly inferior in capacity to the US supercarri­ers, the balance of forces between the two navies will only change marginally rather than substantia­lly,” he said.

Territoria­l disputes

Beijing has embarked on an extensive project to build a “blue water” navy and modernize its two million-strong military, the world’s largest.

China’s defense budget rose 8.1 percent to 1.1 trillion yuan ($175 billion) in 2018, but it is still only about a quarter that of the United States.

The Liaoning has conducted a series of maneuvers with dozens of other ships, submarines and aircraft in the South China Sea in recent weeks.

In March it sailed through the Taiwan Strait, prompting Taipei to dispatch ships and planes to track the vessel, on the same day Chinese President Xi Jinping warned against what he called any attempts to split China.

Beijing sees democratic­ally governed Taiwan as a renegade part of its territory to be brought back into the fold and has not ruled out reunificat­ion by force.

China, Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Taiwan have claims to the South China Sea, while Beijing also has territoria­l disputes with Japan in the East China Sea.

The US, meanwhile, regularly conducts “freedom of navigation” naval operations near artificial islands in the South China Sea to challenge Beijing’s claims.

 ??  ?? China’s first entirely home-built aircraft carrier leaves the northern port of Dalian in Liaoning province for sea trials yesterday, in this photo provided by China’s Xinhua News Agency.
China’s first entirely home-built aircraft carrier leaves the northern port of Dalian in Liaoning province for sea trials yesterday, in this photo provided by China’s Xinhua News Agency.

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