Skip to main content

China Blocks US Aircraft Carrier John C. Stennis Access To Hong Kong Port ( Source- Eurasia Review / Author- MINA)

USS John C. Stennis ( Image credits- Flickr / United States Navy)

Author- MINA 

China has denied a US request for an aircraft carrier group led by USS John C. Stennis to make a port visit to Hong Kong, the US State Department said on Friday, confirming earlier media reports.

Pentagon spokesman, Commander Bill Urban, said another US warship, the USS Blue Ridge, was currently in Hong Kong on a stop-over and the US expected that to continue.

Urban added that the request for a Hong Kong visit by the carrier and its strike group, which have been patrolling the South China Sea, was recently denied, despite a “long track record of successful port visits to Hong Kong.”

The Chinese government, as well as the country’s embassy in Washington did not comment.

The warship requested a port call permit early on Thursday.

The South China Morning Post newspaper, citing the Chinese Foreign Ministry, reported that port calls by US warships and military aircraft had to be approved on a “case by case basis in accordance with sovereignty principles and specific circumstances.”

Aircraft carrier John C. Stennis, two destroyers, two cruisers and a Japan-based US Seventh Fleet flagship sailed into the waters of the South China Sea in early March, to counter the presence of China. The latter has territorial disputes over islands in the South China Sea, rich in deposits of natural resources, with Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam. To assure its claim over the disputed territory, Beijing has been rapidly setting up defense installations in the area.

Beijing has repeatedly warned against US interference in the region. Despite this the US Navy is actively opposing the Chinese initiative, deploying additional warships to the disputed zone and conducting maneuvers near artificial Chinese islands and flying over them, citing “freedom of navigation” as an excuse.


Earlier this month China accused the US of “sabotaging regional peace” after the Pentagon chief announced a military buildup in the Philippines. Speaking in the Philippines on April 14, US Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the US will keep nearly 300 troops in the Philippines through the end of the month, despite completing the joint military drills. He added that US troops will have combat aircraft and helicopters at their disposal. ” In response the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement that military exchanges by relevant countries should not target third parties and much less support a few countries in challenging China’s sovereignty and security.

About the author- MINA is the Macedonian International News Agency

© EURASIA REVIEW ( ALL RIGHTS RESERVED)

Original link to the article- http://www.eurasiareview.com/author/mina/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Strategic Vanguard blog is moving to a new website, our new home

  Thank you for your continued interest in Strategic Vanguard. This blog strategicvanguard.blogspot.com served as an early platform for sharing curated and syndicated content related to global affairs, strategy, and defense with over 3.18 million readers. However, this space is no longer updated and is maintained only as an archive. We’ve Moved! Strategic Vanguard Now Has a New Home with Original Blogs, Podcasts & More. This move helps us bring you faster, richer, and 100% original content, without the limitations of legacy platforms like Blogger. --- ✅ **Visit Our Official Website for Fresh, Original Content:**  🌐  https://www.strategicvanguard.com 🌐 https://www.strategicvanguard.com/blog 🌐  https://www.strategicvanguard.com/podcast 🎥 **Subscribe to Our YouTube Channel:** ▶️ https://www.youtube.com/@StrategicVanguard 📬 **For Updates, Podcasts, and Articles:** 📰 Visit the blog and podcast sections at the official site. We are also available in t...

Devaluation and Despair: Breaking Down China's Currency Dilemma ( Source- The National Interest / Author- Gordon C. Chang)

Source- Wikimedia Commons / Author- JesseW900 Source- The National Interest Author- Gordon G. Chang On Friday, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the Chinese central bank, reversed course and set the renminbi on an upward path. That followed three straight days of devaluation that shook global stock, currency, and commodity markets, sending them downward. Friday’s reversal looks responsible. Nonetheless, the PBOC’s actions last week show policy disarray in the Chinese capital. The net result is that Beijing rattled the world, ruined its reputation for stable management, and did almost nothing to help China’s faltering economy. The daily devaluations follow months of government statements that the central bank would keep the currency stable. Every trading morning, 15 minutes before the 9:30 opening bell, central bank officials announce the day’s reference rate against the U.S. dollar. The renminbi, informally known as the yuan, is then allowed to rise or fall 2...

China releases sick propaganda showing Royal Navy ships being blown up - Daily News