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Chinese Naval Vessel Tries to Force U.S. Warship to Stop in International Waters
Washington Free Beacon ^ | 12/13/2013 | Bill Gertz

Posted on 12/13/2013 2:57:59 AM PST by markomalley

A Chinese naval vessel tried to force a U.S. guided missile warship to stop in international waters recently, causing a tense military standoff in the latest case of Chinese maritime harassment, according to defense officials.

The guided missile cruiser USS Cowpens, which recently took part in disaster relief operations in the Philippines, was confronted by Chinese warships in the South China Sea near Beijing’s new aircraft carrier Liaoning, according to officials familiar with the incident.

“On December 5th, while lawfully operating in international waters in the South China Sea, USS Cowpens and a PLA Navy vessel had an encounter that required maneuvering to avoid a collision,” a Navy official said.

“This incident underscores the need to ensure the highest standards of professional seamanship, including communications between vessels, to mitigate the risk of an unintended incident or mishap.”

A State Department official said the U.S. government issued protests to China in both Washington and Beijing in both diplomatic and military channels.

The Cowpens was conducting surveillance of the Liaoning at the time. The carrier had recently sailed from the port of Qingdao on the northern Chinese coast into the South China Sea.

According to the officials, the run-in began after a Chinese navy vessel sent a hailing warning and ordered the Cowpens to stop. The cruiser continued on its course and refused the order because it was operating in international waters.

Then a Chinese tank landing ship sailed in front of the Cowpens and stopped, forcing the Cowpens to abruptly change course in what the officials said was a dangerous maneuver.

According to the officials, the Cowpens was conducting a routine operation done to exercise its freedom of navigation near the Chinese carrier when the incident occurred about a week ago.

The encounter was the type of incident that senior Pentagon officials recently warned could take place as a result of heightened tensions in the region over China’s declaration of an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) in the East China Sea.

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently called China’s new air defense zone destabilizing and said it increased the risk of a military “miscalculation.”

China’s military forces in recent days have dispatched Su-30 and J-11 fighter jets, as well as KJ-2000 airborne warning and control aircraft, to the zone to monitor the airspace that is used frequently by U.S. and Japanese military surveillance aircraft.

The United States has said it does not recognize China’s ADIZ, as has Japan’s government.

Two U.S. B-52 bombers flew through the air zone last month but were not shadowed by Chinese interceptor jets.

Chinese naval and air forces also have been pressing Japan in the East China Sea over Tokyo’s purchase a year ago of several uninhabited Senkaku Islands located north of Taiwan and south of Okinawa.

China is claiming the islands, which it calls the Diaoyu. They are believed to contain large undersea reserves of natural gas and oil.

The Liaoning, China’s first carrier that was refitted from an old Soviet carrier, and four warships recently conducted their first training maneuvers in the South China Sea. The carrier recently docked at the Chinese naval port of Hainan on the South China Sea.

Defense officials have said China’s imposition of the ADIZ is aimed primarily at curbing surveillance flights in the zone, which China’s military regards as a threat to its military secrets.

The U.S. military conducts surveillance flights with EP-3 aircraft and long-range RQ-4 Global Hawk drones.

In addition to the Liaoning, Chinese warships in the flotilla include two missile destroyers, the Shenyang and the Shijiazhuang, and two missile frigates, the Yantai and the Weifang.

Rick Fisher, a China military affairs expert, said it is likely that the Chinese deliberately staged the incident as part of a strategy of pressuring the United States.

“They can afford to lose an LST [landing ship] as they have about 27 of them, but they are also usually armed with one or more twin 37 millimeter cannons, which at close range could heavily damage a lightly armored U.S. Navy destroyer,” said Fisher, a senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center.

Most Chinese Navy large combat ships would be out-ranged by the 127-millimeter guns deployed on U.S. cruisers, except China’s Russian-made Sovremenny-class ships and Beijing’s new Type 052D destroyers that are armed with 130-millimeter guns.

The encounter appears to be part of a pattern of Chinese political signaling that it will not accept the presence of American military power in its East Asian theater of influence, Fisher said.

“China has spent the last 20 years building up its Navy and now feels that it can use it to obtain its political objectives,” he said.

Fisher said that since early 2012 China has gone on the offensive in both the South China and East China Seas.

“In this early stage of using its newly acquired naval power, China is posturing and bullying, but China is also looking for a fight, a battle that will cow the Americans, the Japanese, and the Filipinos,” he said.

To maintain stability in the face of Chinese military assertiveness, Fisher said the United States and Japan should seek an armed peace in the region by heavily fortifying the Senkaku Islands and the rest of the island chain they are part of.

“The U.S. and Japan should also step up their rearmament of the Philippines,” Fisher said.

The Cowpens incident is the most recent example of Chinese naval aggressiveness toward U.S. ships.

The U.S. intelligence-gathering ship, USNS Impeccable, came under Chinese naval harassment from a China Maritime Surveillance ship, part of Beijing’s quasi-military maritime patrol craft, in June.

During that incident, the Chinese ship warned the Navy ship it was operating illegally despite sailing in international waters. The Chinese demanded that the ship first obtain permission before sailing in the area that was more than 100 miles from China’s coast.

The U.S. military has been stepping up surveillance of China’s naval forces, including the growing submarine fleet, as part of the U.S. policy of rebalancing forces to the Pacific.

The Impeccable was harassed in March 2009 by five Chinese ships that followed it and sprayed it with water hoses in an effort to thwart its operations.

A second spy ship, the USNS Victorious, also came under Chinese maritime harassment several years ago.

Adm. Samuel Locklear, when asked last summer about increased Chinese naval activities near Guam and Hawaii in retaliation for U.S. ship-based spying on China, said the dispute involves different interpretations of controlled waters.

Locklear said in a meeting with reporters in July, “We believe the U.S. position is that those activities are less constrained than what the Chinese believe.”

China is seeking to control large areas of international waters—claiming they are part of its United Nations-defined economic exclusion zone—that Locklear said cover “most of the major sea lines of communication” near China and are needed to remain free for trade and shipping.

Locklear, who is known for his conciliatory views toward the Chinese military, sought to play down recent disputes. When asked if the Chinese activities were troubling, he said: “I would say it’s not provocative certainly. I’d say that in the Asia-Pacific, in the areas that are closer to the Chinese homeland, that we have been able to conduct operations around each other in a very professional and increasingly professional manner.”

The Pentagon and U.S. Pacific Command have sought to develop closer ties to the Chinese military as part of the Obama administration’s Asia pivot policies.

However, China’s military has shown limited interest in closer ties.

China’s state-controlled news media regularly report that the United States is seeking to defeat China by encircling the country with enemies while promoting dissidents within who seek the ouster of the communist regime.

The Obama administration has denied it is seeking to “contain” China and has insisted it wants continued close economic and diplomatic relations.

President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to seek a new type of major power relationship during a summit in California earlier this year. However, the exact nature of the new relationship remains unclear.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: adiz; china; chinesemilitary; chinesenavy; energy; maritime; naturalgas; oil; philippines; redchina; shipmovement; usnavy
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To: central_va

What happened to RCA , Zenith , Motorola , Sylvania , Westinghouse , GE , Emerson , Magnavox ...etc...etc...? ;-)


281 posted on 12/13/2013 2:14:31 PM PST by sushiman
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To: kabar
I found it odd that you would ask a question to which you already knew the answer (according to a later comment).

If you hadn't known the answer, I would have argued that it shows a level of ignorance.

282 posted on 12/13/2013 2:21:00 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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The last statistic that we saw on the matter showed over 150,000 of China’s businesses as being state-owned. All of the banks there are state-owned. What isn’t owned by the PLA is controlled by the PLA. China practices heavy censorship (see China firewall), aided by Google. And yes, our military forces have the ability to control China if necessary.

Government-linked, globetrotting corporate folks shouldn’t hate the U.S.A. and fellow Americans so much, and it’s not nice to collaborate with foreign communist enemies against one’s own country.


283 posted on 12/13/2013 2:21:48 PM PST by familyop (We Baby Boomers are croaking in an avalanche of corruption smelled around the planet.)
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To: central_va

It figures that both of you are still unskilled laborers…..so much is explained…..


284 posted on 12/13/2013 2:22:52 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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To: central_va

I have faith in the USA..in the entrepreneurial spirit of the USA…it will be the entrepreneurs, not the permanent labor class, apparently the class you proudly belong to, that will save the country.

You have a pro Marxist “workers of the world unite” union communist mentality….enjoy Comrade….


285 posted on 12/13/2013 2:30:59 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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To: central_va; C. Edmund Wright
The American laborer, in the lower tiers, is simply not a good workforce.

Bears repeating. But I only worked in steel processing/manufacturing. One company hired temps (primarily) from the bowels of Detroit. The other had Teamsters from the bowels of Chicago.

And I worked 50-60 hours a week in order to make less money than the Teamsters made in order to work 35, and stay home drunk and watch Bulls games (they were mostly Mexicans).

286 posted on 12/13/2013 2:31:59 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: central_va

I was painting with a broad brush….it’s called “generalization” - and its a valid form of debate, as long as you admit you are gneralizing….I admit it, and I clearly was.


287 posted on 12/13/2013 2:32:04 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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What kind of technical work can an international business manager do, say, as compared to an unemployed redneck, who can build to codes, install home energy systems, do auto repairs, systems admin., etc.? And in whose interest would be local zoning laws against manufacturing anything on large, rural, private properties (anti-domestic-competition laws)?


288 posted on 12/13/2013 2:32:24 PM PST by familyop (We Baby Boomers are croaking in an avalanche of corruption smelled around the planet.)
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To: 1rudeboy; central_va

I contend that most great laborers…and there are many….eventually leave the labor pool and become management - or start their own companies of some type. When you look at it in the proper perspective, saying that Americans make bad low tier laborers is a compliment.

Americans are great at many things, but grunt labor is not one of them. People who own businesses that require that kind of labor have to understand this if they want to stay in business. I don’t see this as an anti American comment at all…..merely reality.


289 posted on 12/13/2013 2:36:23 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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To: C. Edmund Wright

And that’s the thing—a crappy laborer is a crappy laborer. It’s not “unpatriotic” to say so.


290 posted on 12/13/2013 2:38:51 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: C. Edmund Wright

No actually I’m highly skilled and a business owner. I’ve had employees in other countries and have found them to be no better then americans.


291 posted on 12/13/2013 2:39:17 PM PST by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: familyop
as compared to an unemployed redneck, who can build to codes, install home energy systems, do auto repairs, systems admin., etc.? And in whose interest would be local zoning laws against manufacturing anything on large, rural, private properties (anti-domestic-competition laws)?

Not sure where you're going with this….but first of all, anyone who can do all of those things is likely not unemployed, unless they are so on purpose. Second, not sure what the zoning laws have to do with this debate…..but overly burdensome zoning laws are of course an example of nanny state liberalism….

292 posted on 12/13/2013 2:39:38 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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To: driftdiver
No actually I’m highly skilled and a business owner.

Then you are clearly not who I was referring to, and yet, you insisted on personalizing it and pretending outrage like a typical liberal.

293 posted on 12/13/2013 2:41:00 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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To: 1rudeboy

And yet, I was called a Maoist and a tool of Chinese handlers for saying so…..when all I was doing was recounting my experience of some 22 years of hiring low skilled and semi skilled labor. And our company had one of the highest retention rates in the industry - but we still had to go thru a lot of folks to find a single good one.

I am out of that part of the industry now….and hiring blue collar labor is something I’ll never do again, ever….


294 posted on 12/13/2013 2:43:37 PM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Tokyo Rove is more than a name, it's a GREAT WEBSITE)
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Comment #295 Removed by Moderator

To: C. Edmund Wright

See I just have no respect for a person who can’t admit they were wrong.


296 posted on 12/13/2013 3:58:58 PM PST by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: central_va
Another Commie lover chimes in.

Freedom lover. Freedom to trade with whomever I choose. Unlike anyone who saw the Confederacy and its vow to perpetual slavery as good government.

297 posted on 12/13/2013 4:24:13 PM PST by Partisan Gunslinger
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To: Partisan Gunslinger
Don't mention the war!
298 posted on 12/13/2013 4:41:16 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: kabar

Good let’s agree that we don’t want a centrally managed economy.


299 posted on 12/13/2013 4:55:19 PM PST by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: Venturer

I was aware of the Smithfield buyout, used to buy one of their hams occasionally, but haven’t bought one since. I love well-smoked ham and we have plenty of local sources-—Smithfieldchicom can suck my bacon.


300 posted on 12/13/2013 5:12:32 PM PST by cherokee1 (skip the names---just kick the buttz)
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