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Scouting, signaling, and gatekeeping : Chinese naval operations in Japanese waters and the international law implications / Peter Dutton.

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Format:
Book
Government document
Author/Creator:
Dutton, Peter
Contributor:
Naval War College (U.S.). China Maritime Studies Institute
Series:
China maritime studies ; no. 2.
China maritime studies ; no. 2
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Law of the sea--China.
Law of the sea.
Navies--China.
Navies.
China.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (32 pages) : maps
Other Title:
Chinese naval operations in Japanese waters and the international law implications
Place of Publication:
Newport. RI : China Maritime Studies Institute, U.S. Naval War College, [2009]
Summary:
In October 2008, a month after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan stepped down and the more hawkish Taro Aso took office, a Chinese flotilla of four People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) ships transited from west to east through Japan's narrow Tsugaru Strait en route to the Pacific Ocean. The vessels were observed together in the Sea of Japan, headed east toward the strait, by a Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) P-3C patrol aircraft; they were about twenty-five nautical miles west-southwest of Tappizaki, the cape at the northern tip of the Tsugaru Peninsula, where the Sea of Japan enters the Tsugaru Strait between the islands of Honshu and Hokkaido. The flotilla consisted of a Sovremennyy-class missile destroyer -- one of four China bought from Russia between 1996 and 2002 -- a supply ship, and two Jiangkai frigates, one of which was a newly commissioned Jiangkai II. Apparently the Sovremennyy and one of the frigates had recently "paid a friendly visit to a naval base in the Russian Far East" before joining the other two Chinese naval vessels in the Sea of Japan and proceeding on through the strait to the Pacific Ocean. The Jiangkai II is the newest and one of the most advanced surface combatants in the Chinese fleet, with a vertical launch system, C-802 surface-to-surface missiles, and the capacity to employ advanced Yu-6 and -7 torpedoes. Although Chinese navy ships and submarines have occasionally transited Japanese straits in the past, this appears to have been the first instance of an armed surface combatant passing between two of Japan's main islands. Almost immediately, the Japanese Ministry of Defense began analyzing "the real purpose of their activity," but it acknowledged that despite the close passage of the PLAN warships to Japanese shores, as they made passage through the Tsugaru Strait the Chinese vessels had remained in "international waters and ... did not infringe upon Japan's territorial waters."
Notes:
"February 2009"--Title page verso
Title from PDF title screen (viewed on November 24, 2009).
Includes bibliographical references (pages 27-32).
Other Format:
Print version: Dutton, Peter. Scouting, signaling, and gatekeeping
OCLC:
469059508
Access Restriction:
APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE.

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