Manila Bulletin

China criticizes US for ship's passage through Taiwan Strait, weeks before new leader takes office

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TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — China's military criticized a U.S. destroyer's passage through the Taiwan Strait, which occurred less than two weeks before the island's new president takes office and while Washington and Beijing are making uneven efforts to restore regular military exchanges.

Navy Senior Capt. Li Xi, spokesman for the Eastern Theater Command, accused the U.S. of having "publicly hyped" the passage of the USS Halsey on Wednesday. In a statement, Li said the command, which oversees operations around the strait, "organized naval and air forces to monitor" the ship's transit and handle matters "in accordance with laws and regulation­s."

The Navy's 7th Fleet said the Halsey "conducted a routine Taiwan Strait transit on May 8 through waters where high-seas freedoms of navigation and overflight apply in accordance with internatio­nal law."

The Arleigh Burke-class guidedmiss­ile destroyer transited through a corridor in the Strait that is "beyond the territoria­l sea" of any coastal state, the fleet's statement said.

"Halsey's transit through the Taiwan Strait demonstrat­es the United States' commitment to upholding freedom of navigation for all nations as a principle," it said "No member of the internatio­nal community should be intimidate­d or coerced into giving up their rights and freedoms. The United

States military flies, sails, and operates anywhere internatio­nal law allows."

The last such passage was April 17, a day after U.S. and Chinese defense chiefs held their first talks since November 2022 in an effort to reduce regional tensions. Military-to-military contact stalled in August 2022, when Beijing suspended all such communicat­ion after then-house Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan. China responded by firing missiles over Taiwan and staging a surge in military maneuvers, including what appeared to be a rehearsal of a naval and aerial blockade of the island.

The critical strait is 160 kilometers (100 mile) wide and divides China from Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy where President-elect William Lai Chingte will be inaugurate­d on May 20. Lai's Democratic Progressiv­e Party favors Taiwan's de facto independen­t status that maintains strong unofficial relations with the U.S. and other major nations.

Although the heavily transited strait is internatio­nal waters and vital to global trade, China considers the passage of warships from the U.S., Britain and other nations through the Taiwan Strait as a challenge to its sovereignt­y.

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