Navy surveillance
plane makes ‘routine transit’ over Taiwan Strait
By
ALEX WILSON
STARS AND
STRIPES October 12, 2023
A Navy P-8 Poseidon surveillance plane prepares for takeoff at
Marine Corps Air Station Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, Sept. 27, 2023. (Logan
Beeney/U.S. Marine Corps)
YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan — A U.S. Navy P-8A Poseidon surveillance aircraft
flew over the contentious Taiwan Strait on Thursday, demonstrating the United
States’ “commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific,” according to the U.S. 7th
Fleet.
The
aircraft flew south through the 110-mile-wide waterway that separates mainland
China from Taiwan, entering from the East China Sea and exiting over the South
China Sea, as part of a “routine transit,” said 7th Fleet spokesman Lt. Luka
Bakic.
“U.S.
Navy ships and aircraft routinely use the Taiwan Strait to transit between the
two [seas] and have done so for many years,” he told Stars and Stripes in an
email Thursday.
The
flight was not a response to any particular event, Bakic said. The Navy
routinely sends guided-missile destroyers and cruisers through the strait; Navy
aircraft also regularly transit there, although the Navy reports such activity
less frequently.
Bakic
did not specify if the aircraft encountered or interacted with Chinese or other
foreign military ships and aircraft but said U.S. ships and aircraft routinely
interact with their foreign counterparts.
“All
interactions with foreign military forces during the transit were consistent
with international norms and did not impact the operation,” he said.
China,
which typically condemns such transits as provocative, had not publicly
responded to the Poseidon’s flight as of Thursday afternoon.
The
Chinese military went on “high alert” following a similar flight on April 28.
The transit proved the U.S. is a “disruptor of peace and stability” in the
region, China’s Eastern Theater Command said in an April 29 news release.
Beijing
views Taiwan, a functioning democracy that split from China in 1949, as a
breakaway province that must be reunified with the mainland.
A
record 103 Chinese aircraft were active around Taiwan on Sept. 18, outnumbering
the previous high of 91 planes and a dozen ships reported by the island’s
military on April 11.
China’s
activity around Taiwan has returned to typical levels. The island spotted 14
aircraft and five warships Thursday, the Ministry of National Defense said in a
post X, formerly Twitter.
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