
China Sends Two Aircraft Carriers Into the Pacific for the First Time
In a display of Beijing's growing military reach, the Chinese Navy sent two aircraft carriers into the Pacific Ocean, far from the country's coast, for the first time to conduct exercises together, Japan's defense minister, Gen Nakatani, said.
Mr. Nakatani told reporters on Monday that the Chinese aircraft carriers were spotted launching and retrieving jet fighters out in the Pacific to the east of the Japanese island of Iwo Jima, about 750 miles south of Tokyo. He said the Japanese navy was monitoring the joint exercise by both vessels, which began on Saturday.
It was the first time that China's two active-duty aircraft carriers, the Liaoning and the Shandong, and their escort ships had operated together in the Pacific beyond the islands of Japan, which form a natural barrier that Beijing calls the First Island Chain.
To escape the confines of that chain, China has been strengthening its navy by adding aircraft carriers, which can project force far greater distances. In addition to the Liaoning and the Shandong, China has built a third aircraft carrier, the Fujian, which is undergoing sea trials before entering active duty. A fourth aircraft carrier is under construction.
By cruising beyond Japan, the Chinese warships are demonstrating that they could challenge not only Japan but also its biggest ally, the United States, for control of the western Pacific during a crisis. If the United States deployed ships from Hawaii, the West Coast or even Guam, they would have to pass near those waters to reach Japan or Taiwan. China claims Taiwan, a self-governing island, as its own territory, but the United States has pledged to help defend it.
So far, the Chinese ships are smaller and carry fewer planes than America's 11 large nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. The Chinese buildup has also prompted Japan to build its first small aircraft carriers since World War II, which will be capable of carrying U.S.-made F-35B stealth fighters.
Hisako Ueno contributed reporting from Tokyo.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
5 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Trump Says US Government Will Get ‘Golden Share' in US Steel
President Donald Trump said the US government will retain a 'golden share' in United States Steel Corp. after its purchase by Japan's Nippon Steel Corp. 'We have a golden stock, we have a golden share, which I control, or a president controls,' Trump said Thursday at a White House event. 'That gives you total control.'
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Japan protests Chinese fighter jet's 'abnormal approaches'
June 12 (UPI) -- Japan's Defense Ministry said Wednesday a Chinese J-15 fighter jet's "abnormal approaches" brought it within 147 feet of Maritime Self-Defense Force P-3C surveillance planes over the past weekend. There were two close calls that came within a short enough distance to risk collision and the delay in publicly announcing them was to analyze what happened. "The government has raised serious concerns with the Chinese side, including to the Chinese ambassador in Tokyo, through the vice minister of foreign affairs, and has strongly urged them to prevent such incidents from recurring," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said at a Thursday news conference. The Chinese warplane came from the aircraft carrier Shandong. It passed in front of an MSDF P-3C jet within a distance of about 984 yards. The Japanese defense ministry also said it confirmed for the first time that China had two carriers operating at the same time in the Pacific Ocean. The Shandong did drills with takeoffs and landings of fighters and helicopters off the southern prefecture of Okinawa Saturday. The Liaoning was spotted about 186 miles southwest of the island of Miniamitori Saturday. That carrier was also seen beyond the "second island chain" from Japan's Izu Islands to Guam, which China considers its defense line. Japan's government called on China to end the flights because " these abnormal approaches by a Chinese military plane may cause an accidental collision."
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Taiwan ramps up coast guard and military readiness in face of Beijing's 'gray zone' warfare
KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan - Taiwan's coast guard and affiliated military units put on a show of strength during an "Ocean Day" drill last week amid growing threats from China. Held in southern Taiwan's largest city, Kaohsiung, the exercise was overseen by Taiwan President William Lai, and while framed as demonstrations of search and rescue and anti-terrorism abilities, there was no escaping the larger reason why Taiwan is strengthening frontline defenses and operational readiness. Alongside the navy, Taiwan's coast guard is undergoing modernization. On display during the Ocean Day exercise was one of Taiwan's new Anping-class corvettes, stealth-capable vessels with surface-to-land missile systems, and, naturally, advanced rescue capabilities. Taiwan's President Targets China Influence, Kicks Out Pro-beijing Agitators Amid Rising Tensions This all comes as Taiwan's top weapons developer recently announced they had developed various new sea drones – including so-called "kamikaze" or suicide drones. An anonymous official claimed Taiwan's military will test the sea drones in waters off Southern Taiwan this August. Defense Minister Wellington Koo confirmed late last month that the navy of independently-ruled Taiwan will soon add unmanned surface vehicles, while the army is set to inaugurate its first drone units this year. Reports say Taiwan produced around 10,000 drones last year, and this year plans to buy 3,000+ more made by local companies for military use. Read On The Fox News App In remarks following the Ocean Day exercise, Lai urged Taiwan's lawmakers to back his administration's latest defense spending proposals and told the group of select guests that included the highest-ranking American official based in Southern Taiwan, Neil Gibson, that the matter was about more than just ships and hardware. "It's about national resilience." Taiwanese government officials frequently denounce what they term as escalating "gray zone" warfare from Beijing, actions such as harassing fishing vessels, illegal incursions, and, on at least one occasion, boarding a Taiwan-flagged civilian ferry. Taiwan sees these actions as Chinese attempts to create a "new normal" of uncontested control of the roughly 100-mile-wide Taiwan Strait that separates the two sides. Taiwan's coast guard is dwarfed by the growing Chinese coast guard, which is already the largest in the world in terms of the number and size of vessels. Last year, according to statistics provided to Fox News Digital by Taiwan's Ocean Affairs Council, Taiwan's coast guard drove away 1,196 vessels from Taiwanese waters – 1,135 of which were from China. China Ramps Up Military 'Rehearsals' Around Taiwan, Outstrips Us In Air, Maritime, Space Lai said there is an urgent need for upgraded infrared surveillance to enable round-the-clock maritime monitoring, as well as other tech that could combat Chinese tactics that include illegal sand dredging, cyber disruptions and even sabotage of undersea cables, actions deliberately chosen to stay below the threshold of "acts of war." Ross Darrell Feingold, a lawyer and political risk analyst based in Taipei, told Fox News Digital that Lai's calls for bipartisanship arise from the president's party not currently holding a majority in Taiwan's Parliament, which will make the passage of his proposed $13.6 billion USD "special budget" much more difficult. "This proposed spending would go to the coast guard, the military, and be used to assist domestic industries affected by higher U.S. tariffs," said Feingold, who noted that the Trump administration should have no issues with selling weapons to he took office on May 20, 2024, Lai has increased defense spending within the limits of what he can do while not holding a majority in Parliament. Beijing's communist government stubbornly claims Taiwan as its territory despite never having governed it for a single day, and in recent years, removed language calling for a "peaceful settlement" in official statements. One widely quoted assertion claims Chinese President Xi Jinping has ordered the Chinese military to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027, now less than two years article source: Taiwan ramps up coast guard and military readiness in face of Beijing's 'gray zone' warfare