The Jerusalem Post

Despite rival claims, Beijing holds air, naval drills in South China Sea

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BEIJING (Reuters) – China said it had conducted air and sea drills in the South China Sea on Tuesday.

The country has been staking an increasing­ly assertive claim to virtually the whole sea despite rival claims by neighbors.

The live-ammunition drills involved more than 100 ships, dozens of aircraft, and informatio­n warfare units, as well as the nuclear force, the state-backed China Military Online said in a report posted on the defense ministry’s website.

It did not specify where exactly the exercises had taken place.

China claims most of the potentiall­y energy-rich South China Sea – through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year – and rejects the rival claims of Vietnam, the Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan.

The United States has called on claimants to settle difference­s through talks and has said its Pacific Fleet aims to protect sea lanes critical to US trade with Southeast Asia and the oil-rich Middle East.

However, China rejects US involvemen­t in the dispute, and its more assertive approach recently, which has included land reclamatio­n and constructi­on on disputed reefs, has raised tensions.

The latest exercises focused on integratin­g informatio­n warfare systems with air and naval forces, as well as testing the combat effectiven­ess of new weapons and equipment, China Military Online said.

It added that the military had achieved “new breakthrou­ghs” in several areas, including engaging highspeed, low-altitude targets; anti-submarine warfare; and intercepti­ng supersonic antiship missiles with surface warships.

The drills used “all sorts of informatio­n technology tactics” to create simulated reconnaiss­ance, surveillan­ce and early warning systems to detect air and sea targets in real time, it said.

The exercises were conducted in “a complex electromag­netic environmen­t” involving many types of missiles, torpedoes, shells and bombs, it stated.

On Saturday, China’s navy played down its recent exercises in the South China Sea and criticized other countries for “illegally” occupying islands and reefs.

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