A US warship traveled through the Taiwan Strait

The American destroyer USS Milius sailed Sunday April 16 in the Taiwan Strait, claimed by Beijing, announced the American navy

A US warship traveled through the Taiwan Strait

The American destroyer USS Milius sailed Sunday April 16 in the Taiwan Strait, claimed by Beijing, announced the American navy. This maneuver comes a week after extensive Chinese military exercises in the same area.

The USS Milius “conducted a routine transit through the Taiwan Strait” on Sunday, the US Navy said in a statement, “in waters where freedom of navigation and overflight on the high seas applies in accordance with international law. ". "The vessel transited through a corridor in the strait located beyond any territorial sea of ​​a coastal state," the statement added. “The United States military flies, sails and operates wherever international law permits. »

China said on Monday it had been carefully monitoring the passage of a US warship through the Taiwan Strait, claimed by Beijing, accusing the United States of willfully "hype" the incident. "The troops...maintain a high level of alert all the time and resolutely uphold national sovereignty and security, as well as regional peace and stability," said Shi Yi, a spokesperson for the Chinese army, in a statement issued by the Eastern Theater of Operations.

Last week, the USS Milius sailed near the Spratly Islands, also claimed by Beijing in the South China Sea. The Chinese government had denounced an "illegal intrusion". The passage of the American warship near Taiwan comes a week after extensive Chinese military exercises around the island.

For three days, Chinese warships and warplanes had simulated a "closure" of Taiwan, in retaliation for a meeting in the United States between Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen and the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy . The exercises officially ended on April 10, but Chinese military ships and aircraft have continued to circulate around Taiwan ever since. Taiwan's Defense Ministry said on Monday it detected 4 Chinese ships and 18 aircraft, 4 of which entered Taiwan's Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ).

Taiwan's ADIZ is not identical to the island's airspace, and includes a much larger area that overlaps part of China's ADIZ, and even includes a portion of the mainland. Western military ships regularly cross the Taiwan Strait, each time provoking protests from Beijing. The American destroyer USS Chung-Hoon crossed this strait in January, followed in February by two American and Canadian frigates.

China views with displeasure the rapprochement in recent years between the Taiwanese authorities and the United States which, despite the absence of official relations, provides the island with substantial military support.

Beijing considers Taiwan as a province that it has not yet managed to reunify with the rest of its territory since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949. China is aiming for this reunification, by force if necessary.