| 
 PLA sorties threaten 
encirclement 
 
NEW FRONT: ¡§I have no doubt that the PLA Navy is 
familiarizing itself with the operating environment off Taiwan, including the 
coastal geography and underwater hydrography, and experimenting with tactics for 
waging war there.¡¨ 
 
By J. Michael Cole / Staff Reporter 
 
  
Source: screengrab from Google 
Map 
 
Sorties by the Chinese navy into the 
Pacific Ocean are becoming more commonplace and provide it with the means to 
familiarize itself with the environment surrounding Taiwan, while creating a new 
front from which to attack in case of conflict, an analyst said. 
 
Four frigates from the People¡¦s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) were spotted in 
waters between Miyako Island and Okinawa Island on Friday, the Japanese Ministry 
of Defense said last week. All four ships, which were tracked by a P-3C patrol 
aircraft deployed by the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Forces, were traveling from 
the direction of the East China Sea toward the Pacific Ocean, where they 
conducted exercises. 
 
The ships ¡X the Type 054A Jiangkai II-class missile frigate Changzhou, the 
Jiangwei II-class Jiangxing and Lianyungang and the Jiangwei I-class Tongling ¡X 
stayed in international waters and did not enter Japanese territorial waters, 
the ministry said. 
 
All the ships, which are part of China¡¦s East Sea Fleet, are equipped with 
anti-ship and -surface-to-air missiles. 
 
The 300km-wide channel -between Okinawa and Miyako, known as the Miyako Strait, 
is regarded as one of the most convenient routes for Chinese vessels heading for 
the Pacific. Chinese vessels went through it in June 2010 and twice last year as 
they headed for exercises in the Pacific. 
 
Such sorties have become increasingly commonplace as China¡¦s navy gets more 
comfortable as an oceangoing navy, James Holmes, an associate professor at the 
US Naval War College, told the Taipei Times. 
 
Holmes, who recently co--authored a study of the Chinese navy, said the Japanese 
Defense Ministry was now publishing maps of Chinese naval forays through the 
Japanese archipelago. 
 
¡§The maps depict the tracks of PLAN flotillas as though ramen noodles were 
spilling through the home islands into the Pacific,¡¨ he said, adding that in 
peacetime, China had as much a right as anyone to transit through those 
waterways, provided they conformed to the restrictions in the Law of the Sea 
Treaty. 
 
However, asked to discuss the implications for Taiwan¡¦s security, Holmes was 
less sanguine. 
 
¡§I have no doubt that the PLAN is familiarizing itself with the operating 
environment off Taiwan, including the coastal geography and underwater 
hydrography, and experimenting with tactics for waging war there,¡¨ he said. 
 
¡§Some strategists, myself included, portray [Taiwan¡¦s] rugged eastern coast as a 
kind of sanctuary for small missile boats and, potentially, submarines,¡¨ Holmes 
said. ¡§It only makes sense for the PLAN to take the measure of the ¡¥strength and 
situation¡¦ of a potential enemy before an armed clash.¡¨ 
 
Crucially, the PLAN presence in the Pacific enhances its ability to fight all 
around Taiwan and not just along the west coast, which has been the traditional 
direction from which a Chinese attack would come, he said. 
 
Miyako is located about 350km east off the northern tip of Taiwan, including 
Keelung Naval Base. The area also faces Cha Shan Air Base in Hualien. 
 
Such encirclement of Taiwan would greatly complicate its ability to counter a 
naval attack and could exploit weaknesses in defenses along its east coast, 
which faces away from China. 
 
¡§Equally important, by displaying that capability vis-a-vis Taipei and 
Washington, the navy enhances Beijing¡¦s bargaining power in future dealings 
across the strait,¡¨ Holmes said. The PLA Navy is practicing the skills needed to 
coerce and deter while helping underwrite Chinese diplomacy in the bargain.¡¨ 
 
In related developments, the People¡¦s Liberation Army Daily announced on 
Tuesday that the recently commissioned Type 071 Jinggangshan landing platform 
dock under the South China Sea Fleet had conducted its first joint training with 
helicopters and air cushion boats. Ayt19,000 tonnes, the Jinggangshan is the 
heaviest LPD in the PLAN. 
 |