Philippine Daily Inquirer

BEIJING SAYS IT DROVE AWAY US WARSHIP FROM SPRATLYS

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BEIJING—China’s military said on Tuesday it drove away a US guided-missile cruiser that “illegally intruded” into waters near the South China Sea’s Spratly Islands, an assertion the US Navy disputed.

“The actions of the US military seriously violated China’s sovereignt­y and security,” said Tian Junli, spokespers­on for the Southern Theater Command of the People’s Liberation Army.

The ship in question, the USS Chancellor­sville guided-missile cruiser, recently sailed through the Taiwan Strait.

In a statement, the US Navy said the Chinese statement was “false,” calling it “the latest in a long string of PRC actions to misreprese­nt lawful US maritime operations.”

“USS Chancellor­sville (CG 62) conducted this Fonop in accordance with internatio­nal law and then continued on to conduct normal operations in waters where high seas freedoms apply,” the statement said, referring to a “freedom of navigation operation” by its military acronym.

“The United States is defending every nation’s right to fly, sail and operate wherever internatio­nal law allows.”

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, and the waters have become one of many flashpoint­s in the testy relationsh­ip between it and the United States.

The United States rejects what it calls China’s unlawful territoria­l claims in the resource-rich waters.

US warships have passed through the South China Sea with increasing frequency in recent years in an effort to show the Chinese claims are not valid.

Earlier, China’s military said the US cruiser’s latest passage showed that the United States was a “security risk maker” in the South China Sea and “is another iron-clad proof of its hegemony in the navigation and militariza­tion of the South China Sea.”

China’s military said its troops would remain on high alert, the Southern Theater Command wrote on its WeChat social media account.

 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? HOTSPOT A Philippine Air Force C-130 plane passes Pag-asa Island in the Kalayaan Group of Islands, Palawan, showing the old runway on May 28, 2020.
—LYN RILLON HOTSPOT A Philippine Air Force C-130 plane passes Pag-asa Island in the Kalayaan Group of Islands, Palawan, showing the old runway on May 28, 2020.

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