US Navy sailing warship into Taiwan Strait prompts fiery response from China: ‘Trouble and provocation’

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The Chinese government accused the United States of causing “trouble and provocation” in a statement on Thursday after the U.S. Navy sailed a warship through the sensitive Taiwan Strait.

“U.S. warships and planes have caused trouble and provocation on China’s doorstep, and carried out large-scale, high-frequency activities in waters and airspace around China,” Chinese Defence Ministry spokesperson Colonel Wu Qian told reporters at a monthly briefing.

The comment came after USS John Finn sailed through a corridor in the Taiwan Strait for the first time since Taiwan hosted its presidential election. The U.S. Navy defended the action, saying the destroyer’s path was “beyond the territorial sea of any coastal state.”

Wu said China’s response in driving away the ship was “justified, reasonable, professional and restrained.”

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The Defence Ministry spokesperson said China will “continue to organize relevant military operations” in and around the Taiwan Strait.

China officially claims Taiwan, which is democratically governed and operates autonomously, as within its sovereignty. The U.S. and most other countries recognize this so-called “One China” policy and formally agree Taiwan is a part of China.

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Map of Taiwan, China

In the island’s most recent presidential election, the two leading candidates offered competing ideas on how Taiwan should relate to mainland China. The people of Taiwan elected William Lai, who campaigned on keeping distance from Beijing, in January. The President-elect will be inaugurated in May.

During the briefing, Wu also accused the Philippines of “violating China’s sovereignty and making provocations in the South China Sea” for attempting to reinforce construction in the contested Spratly Islands. The spokesperson also said Manilla was “in collusion with external powers.”

Colonel Wu

China also denied providing any weapons or equipment to the Middle East. The Israeli military accused China of being involved after it claimed it found Hamas militants using Chinese-made weaponry in the Gaza Strip.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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