China holds live-fire navy drills in East China Sea

In this Aug. 1, 2016 photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a missile is launched from the guided-missile destroyer Taizhou during a live ammunition drill in the East China Sea. China's navy has fired dozens of missiles and torpedoes during exercises in the East China Sea that come amid heightened maritime tensions in the region. (Dai Zongfeng/Xinhua via AP)

In this Aug. 1, 2016, photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a missile is launched from the guided-missile destroyer Taizhou during a live ammunition drill in the East China Sea. China’s navy has fired dozens of missiles and torpedoes during exercises in the East China Sea that come amid heightened maritime tensions in the region. AP

BEIJING, China — China’s navy has fired dozens of missiles and torpedoes during exercises in the East China Sea that come amid heightened maritime tensions in the region, underscoring Beijing’s determination to back up its sovereignty claims with force if needed.

The live-fire drills that began Monday follow China’s strident rejection of an international arbitration panel’s ruling last month that invalidated Beijing’s claims to a vast swath of the South China Sea.

READ: China on war footing

That led to days of angry statements from Beijing, followed by live-firing naval exercises in the South China Sea and the launch of regular aerial patrols in the area.

The Defense Ministry on Tuesday said the East China Sea exercises were aimed at improving the “intensity, precision, stability and speed” of its forces amid an environment of strong electromagnetic forces that result from modern electronic warfare.

“An information technology-based war at sea is sudden, cruel and short, which requires fast transition to combat status, quick preparation and high assault efficiency,” the ministry said.

The drills include ships, submarines, aircraft and coastguard forces, illustrating China’s growing emphasis on integrated training under realistic conditions.

China’s navy has been closing the gap with its U.S. rival in both ship numbers and technology, including the deployment of advanced anti-ship missiles, nuclear submarines and the country’s first aircraft carrier.

While global attention has been drawn to the South China Sea, where five governments exercise territorial claims overlapping with China’s, Beijing also operates extensively in the East China Sea where it claims a string of uninhabited islands controlled by Japan./rga

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