BEIJING: China's navy has carried out drills in the Sea of Japan, the Chinese military's official newspaper said on Friday, describing the exercises as routine and done in accordance with international law and practice.
The Chinese navy has increasingly been exercising in waters far from home as it seeks to hone its operational abilities. Last year, five Chinese ships carried out exercises in international waters in the Bering Sea off Alaska.
The People's Liberation Army Daily did not say exactly where the latest drills took place, describing it only as a "certain part of the Sea of Japan".
Drill commander Xu Haihua said the exercises were part of routine annual arrangements and were meant to help improve the fleet's ability to fight far out at sea.
The paper said some of the ships involved were on their way back from the U.S.-hosted Rim of the Pacific exercise, or RIMPAC, held in Hawaii.
"Exercises far out at sea in international waters are commonly done by navies of the world, and this year our navy has many times organised fleets to carry out exercises far out in the Western Pacific," the newspaper said.
"This deep sea exercise is part of annual training arrangements, is not aimed at any specific country, region or target, and accords with international law and practice," it said.
The Sea of Japan is a strategic waterway bordered by Japan, Russia, South Korea and North Korea.
-
Canadian PM visits China after a decade of diplomatic strain: What deals are in focus?
-
Anthropic rolls out healthcare features for Claude AI amid OpenAI push
-
Uber faces landmark trial in US over sexual assault claim
-
Meta hires ex-Trump aide Dina Powell McCormick to help guide AI strategy
-
AI breakthrough tool to shrink years of drug discovery into days
-
Former prisoner buys jail where he once served time for shock reason
-
Utah cop 'turns into frog' in AI police report
-
UN court opens Myanmar Rohingya genocide case: A pivotal test for international justice?