The Philippine Star

Xi presides over large-scale naval display in SCS

- – Reuters, Edith Regalado, Marvin Sy, Jaime Laude

In this photo released on April 12 by Xinhua, Chinese President Xi Jinping (in green military uniform) poses with soldiers on a navy ship after reviewing the Chinese navy fleet in the South China Sea. Inset shows Filipinos on a motorized boat passing the US aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt anchored at the mouth of Manila Bay.

BEIJING – President Xi Jinping presided over the Chinese navy’s largest-ever military display on Thursday, state media reported, in the country’s latest show of force in the disputed South China Sea. State broadcaste­r China Central Television showed footage of Xi boarding the destroyer Changsha before sailing to an unspecifie­d location in the South China Sea and watching the procession, which involved more than 10,000 naval officers, 76 fighter jets, and a flotilla of 48 warships and submarines.

Xi told the assembled troops that China’s need for a world-leading naval force “has never been more pressing than today” and urged them to devote their unswerving loyalty to the party, before watching through binoculars four J-15 fighter jets take off from the Liaoning, China’s sole operationa­l aircraft carrier.

He said the People’s Liberation Army should work to develop its naval forces, build up modern maritime combat system and strengthen its capability in diversifie­d military missions.

China’s armed forces, the world’s largest, are in the midst of an ambitious modernizat­ion program, which includes investment in technology and new equipment such as stealth fighters and aircraft carriers, as well as cuts to troop numbers.

But China’s military buildup has unnerved its neighbors, particular­ly because of its increasing assertiven­ess in territoria­l disputes in the East and South China Seas and over Taiwan, a self-ruled territory Beijing claims as its own.

Also on Thursday, China announced it would hold live-fire military drills in the Taiwan Straits on April 18.

Taiwan’s defense ministry said in a statement that its army had the situation under control and could ensure Taiwan’s safety.

Xi, who as chairman of the Central Military Commission is also the army’s commander-inchief, has shown a penchant for putting on eyecatchin­g displays of military might, including a large-scale parade of tanks and missiles through the center of Beijing in 2015, and another in the remote Zhurihe training base of Inner Mongolia in July.

 ?? AP, MIGUEL DE GUZMAN ??
AP, MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines