U.S. Navy carriers conduct South China Sea drills as Chinese ships watch
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[July 06, 2020]
By Tim Kelly
TOKYO (Reuters) - Two U.S. Navy aircraft
carriers are conducting exercises in the contested South China Sea
within sight of Chinese naval vessels spotted near the flotilla, the
commander of one of the carriers, the USS Nimitz, told Reuters on
Monday.
"They have seen us and we have seen them," Rear Admiral James Kirk said
in a telephone interview from the Nimitz, which has been conducting
flight drills in the waterway with the Seventh Fleet carrier, the USS
Ronald Reagan, that began on the U.S. Independence Day holiday of July
4.
The U.S. Navy has brought carriers together for such shows of force in
the region in the past, but this year's drill comes amid heightened
tension as the United States criticises China over its novel coronavirus
response and accuses it of taking advantage of the pandemic to push
territorial claims in the South China Sea and elsewhere.
China's foreign ministry said the United States had deliberately sent
its ships to the South China Sea to flex its muscles and accused it of
trying to drive a wedge between countries in the region.
The Pentagon, when it announced the dual carrier exercise, said it
wanted to "stand up for the right of all nations to fly, sail and
operate wherever international law allows", describing its 100,000-ton
ships and the 90 or so aircraft they each carry as a "symbol of
resolve".
About 12,000 sailors are on ships in the combined carrier strike groups.
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Sailors man the rails as aircraft carrier USS Nimitz with Carrier
Strike Group 11, and some 7,500 sailors and airmen depart for a 6
month deployment in the Western Pacific from San Diego, California,
U.S., June 5, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
China's claims nine tenths of in the resource-rich South China Sea,
through which some $3 trillion of trade passes a year. Brunei,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam have competing claims.
China has built island bases atop atolls in the region but says its
intentions are peaceful.
Contacts with Chinese ships had been without incident, Kirk said.
"We have the expectation that we will always have interactions that
are professional and safe," he said. "We are operating in some
pretty congested waters, lots of maritime traffic of all sorts."
(Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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