Japan destroyer Akizuki sails through Taiwan Strait

By Anjali Sharma

WASHINGTON – Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force’s destroyer Akizuki on Sunday sailed through the Taiwan Strait in an attempt to counter the growing Chinese influence in the region, local media reported on Saturday.

The Japanese destroyer navigated the waterway through the strait from north to south after taken part in a joint drill held in the South China Sea in early February with United States, Australian, and Philippines vessels.

News media reported that it is the second time that an MSDF vessel has passed through the waters between Taiwan and China. MSDF destroyer Sazanami sailed in the strait along with Australian and New Zealand vessels in September.

The combined armed and defence forces of Australia, Japan, the Philippines, and the US conducted a Multilateral Maritime Cooperative Activity within the Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone demonstrating a collective commitment to strengthen regional and international cooperation in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific in Feb.

It claimed that Taiwan Strait and Taiwan is an inalienable part of China, Beijing opposes any kind of patrolling in the Taiwan Strait and perceives it as a security threat.

US, Japan and their allies consider the Taiwan Strait as an international waterway and routinely send warships through Taiwan Strait upholding freedom of navigation and countering China’s aggressive posturing in the region.

The relations between China and Japan have deteriorated over territorial disputes regarding the Senkaku Islands.

The islands have strategic significance as it is close to important shipping lanes, and also offer rich fishing grounds besides having the potential existence of oil reserves.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan has stated that the Chinese Coast Guard ships persistently make unilateral attempts to change the status quo by force or coercion in the waters around the Senkaku Islands.

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