China says Tasman Sea navy firing drills ‘in line’ with international law

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FILE PHOTO: Chinese Defence Ministry spokesperson Wu Qian attends a press briefing in Beijing, China August 31, 2023. REUTERS/Yew Lun Tian/File Photo

The comment by China's defence spokesman, Mr Wu Qian, followed concerns voiced by both countries’ officials that they did not receive adequate warning of the drills in international waters.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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BEIJING – Recent unprecedented live-fire drills by China’s navy in the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand were “totally in line with international law”, a spokesman for its defence ministry said on Feb 27.

The comment by Mr Wu Qian followed concerns voiced by both countries’ officials that they did not receive adequate warning of the drills in international waters, which forced commercial airlines to divert flights.

“We noticed Australia and New Zealand repeatedly said China’s PLA operations are in line with international law. We think this shows there is no problem,” Mr Wu told a briefing in the Chinese capital.

He did not directly address questions about whether more Tasman Sea drills could be expected, or whether Australia and New Zealand would get more timely warnings in future.

New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters

raised the issue during meetings with Chinese leaders

in Beijing on Feb 26, saying the inadequate notification was a failure that he would like “corrected into the future”.

Reports in Chinese state media this week confirmed the presence of three ships – a Type 055 destroyer, a Type 054 frigate and a replenishment vessel – in the Tasman Sea.

The full extent of the drills is not known but the state-backed Global Times newspaper posted pictures of the stealthy Type 055 destroyer, which Western militaries regard as China’s most advanced naval ship, firing its deck guns.

It is not yet known if the vessel tested its load of cruise missiles that can attack sea and land targets or its torpedoes.

Military attaches and security analysts are watching the deployment closely, given the unprecedented nature of China’s drills in the Tasman Sea and the importance of its eight Type 055s for the growing blue-water capabilities of its navy.

The three Chinese ships were south of Tasmania within Australia's exclusive economic zone and were now moving west, the New Zealand Defence Force said on Feb 26.

Some online trackers put the Chinese task force 160 nautical miles east of Hobart, or within Australia’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).

EEZs are considered international waters and foreign military vessels have rights to operate within them. REUTERS

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