Global Times

China to hold monthlong military drills in South China Sea

- By Liu Xuanzun

China has announced that it will hold military exercises in the South China Sea for the whole of March, at a time when the US military has been frequently sending reconnaiss­ance aircraft and ships to the region and a French warship group is on its way.

The South China Sea will likely remain a flashpoint with the new US administra­tion expected to continue to pressure China with both military and political moves, analysts said on Sunday.

Military exercises will be held in a circular zone with a radius of five kilometers in the South China Sea, west of the Leizhou Peninsula, from Monday to March 31, and the entry of other vessels is prohibited, reads a navigation restrictio­n notice released by China’s Maritime Safety Administra­tion on its website on Friday.

The notice did not elaborate on the details of the exercises.

Since July 2020, China has held several rounds of military drills in the region, indicating it is a routine location for exercises, analysts said.

The exercises come at a time when the US has started to again frequently conduct close- up reconnaiss­ance operations on China’s coastal regions as well as on hydrologic­al environmen­ts in the South China Sea.

According to monitoring data released by the South China Sea Strategic Situation Probing Initiative ( SCSPI), a Beijing- based think tank, the US sent reconnaiss­ance aircraft of different types, including an MQ- 4C maritime reconnaiss­ance drone, an EP- 3E spy plane and an RC- 135U strategic reconnaiss­ance aircraft, to the South China Sea on Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, and the USNS Impeccable ocean surveillan­ce ship to the region on Friday.

France also sent an amphibious assault ship and a frigate in mid- February, and they are scheduled to transit the South China Sea twice, Paris- based navalnews. com reported on February 18.

According to the route plan in the navalnews. com report, the French warships are scheduled to sail through the Qiongzhou Strait, an inland sea of China between the Leizhou Peninsula and the island province of Hainan.

The US is attempting to contain China by rallying its Western allies to the South China Sea, which has more political rather than military significan­ce, analysts said. China is expected to continue facing pressure from the sea, as the US, its allies and India could keep stirring up troubles, Li Jie, a Beijingbas­ed naval expert, told the Global Times.

Since the South China Sea, the Taiwan Straits and the Diaoyu Islands will remain as maritime security flashpoint­s, Chinese troops should enhance combat preparedne­ss, Li said.

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