China launches third aircraft carrier, named after province opposite
Taiwan
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[June 17, 2022]
By Martin Quin Pollard
BEIJING (Reuters) -China launched its third
aircraft carrier on Friday, the Fujian, named after the province
opposite self-ruled Taiwan, sending a statement of intent to rivals as
it modernises its military.
President Xi Jinping has made overhauling the world's largest armed
forces a central part of his agenda, seeking to project power well
beyond China's shores, though the government says it has no hostile
intent.
Champagne, colourful ribbons, water cannons and smoke were deployed to
celebrate the carrier's launch and official naming at a ceremony at the
Jiangnan shipyard in Shanghai, state media reported.
Dozens of navy personnel lined up in front of the ship and sang the
national anthem at the ceremony, which was attended by senior officials
including Xu Qiliang, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission.
The aircraft carrier features a full-length flight deck with a catapult
launch system, according to state media.
The Fujian will join the Shandong, commissioned in late 2019, and the
Liaoning, which China bought second-hand from Ukraine in 1998 and
refitted domestically.
China is still honing its ability to operate the carriers, and integrate
them into battle groups, something the United States has been doing for
decades.
Only the United States, with 11 aircraft carriers, has more of the
vessels.
The Fujian's launch demonstrates the military's increasing capability at
a time of rising tension with the United States over Chinese-claimed
Taiwan and Beijing's claims to the South China Sea.
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The Chinese flag is seen in this illustration taken May 30, 2022.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
The coastal province of Fujian is just across the
Taiwan Strait from Taiwan and home to the Eastern Theatre Command of
the People's Liberation Army.
Taiwan is a thriving democracy but China considers the island its
own territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring it
under its control.
A senior Taiwan official familiar with the island's security
planning told Reuters that with the new carrier China was flagging
to the region its intentions about projecting power well into the
Pacific.
"In the future, they want to directly penetrate to the east of the
first island chain, which includes Japan's Ryukyu Islands and the
Pacific waters off Taiwan's east," the official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
"Any regional cooperation is seen by Beijing as an intervention in
the Taiwan issue or a challenge to China. The launch of the new
carrier is a defiant statement."
Taiwan has been modernising its own armed forces, including putting
into service a new class of highly agile stealth warships, which
Taiwan refers to as an "aircraft carrier killer" due to its missile
complement.
Taiwan's defence ministry said in a statement sent to Reuters about
the new carrier that it "attaches great importance" to China's
military developments and "incorporates this into enemy situation
research in a forward-looking manner".
(Reporting by Ryan Woo and Martin Pollard; Additional reporting by
Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard in Taipei; editing by Richard Pullin,
Stephen Coates and Kim Coghill)
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