Washington caps year of drills to deter China with ten-day military
exercise
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[November 30, 2021]
By Tim Kelly
USS CARL VINSON (Reuters) - The United
States on Tuesday completed ten days of joint military drills in Asian
waters with Japan and other allies as it ups the ante on deterring China
from pursuing its territorial ambitions amid growing tension in the
region over Taiwan.
The ANNUALEX drill included 35 warships and dozens of aircraft in the
Philippine Sea off Japan's southern coast. The U.S. and Japanese forces
were led by the nuclear-powered USS Carl Vinson carrier, which was also
joined by ships from Canada, Australia, and for the first time, Germany.
On Tuesday, the Vinson was being shadowed by a Chinese navy ship.
"We try to deter aggression from some nations that are showing
burgeoning strength that maybe we haven't experienced before," U.S.
Seventh Fleet commander Vice Admiral Karl Thomas said at a briefing
aboard the carrier.
The exercise was meant to "tell those nations that maybe today is not
the day," he said.
Thomas was accompanied by the commander of the exercise, Japan Maritime
Self-Defense Force Vice Admiral Hideki Yuasa. Home to the biggest
concentration of American forces outside the United States, Tokyo is
Washington's key ally in the region.
Increasing pressure by China on Taiwan is causing concern in both Japan
and the United States. Japan worries that key sea lanes supplying it
will come under Beijing's sway should it gain control of the island.
That move would also threaten U.S. military bases in the region.
China, which views Taiwan as a breakaway province, says its intentions
in the region are peaceful.
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The ten-day exercise caps a year of drills between
the United States, Japan and other countries, including Britain,
France, Germany and the Netherlands.
London this year deployed its new $4.15 billion aircraft carrier the
HMS Queen Elizabeth to the region, culminating in a visit to Japan
in September along with two destroyers, two frigates and a
submarine.
To get there, it sailed through the contested South China Sea, of
which China claims 90%. Also in September, Britain's HMS Richmond
passed through the Taiwan Strait separating the island from mainland
China, prompting a rebuke from Beijing.
Tokyo, in its latest annual defence strategy paper, identifies China
as its main national security threat and said it had a "sense of
crisis" regarding Taiwan as Chinese military activity around the
island intensifies.
The British carrier joined a Japanese carrier, along with the Vinson
- which operates F-35 stealth jets - and the USS Ronald Reagan, for
a rare four-carrier training exercise in the waters around Japan.
(Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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