Two US warships have passed through the Taiwan Strait, the US Navy announced on Sunday, a first since unprecedented Chinese maneuvers near the island. This passage “demonstrates the commitment of the United States to a free and open Indo-Pacific region”, specifies the press release of the American navy.
In response to China’s “provocative” actions
On August 12, Washington announced its intention to strengthen its commercial relations with Taiwan and to carry out new air and sea crossings in the strait, in response to the “provocative” actions of China.
Kurt Campbell, the White House’s Asia-Pacific coordinator, said that day that Beijing had used House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s recent controversial visit to Taiwan to try to upend the status quo on the location of the island.
Beijing had used this pretext to “launch a pressure campaign once morest Taiwan to change the status quo, jeopardizing peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait”, by launching multi-day air and sea exercises around of the island.
American ships and planes will also make new passages in the Taiwan Strait “in the coming weeks”, Kurt Campbell announced at the time.
Continue to fly, sail or operate wherever international law permits
American forces “will continue to fly, sail or operate wherever international law authorizes it”, he continued, without specifying the nature of the deployments carried out in the strait or their timetable.
Taiwan lives under the constant threat of an invasion from Beijing, which considers the autonomous island as part of its territory to be reconquered one day, and if necessary by force.
Beijing rails once morest any diplomatic action that might confer legitimacy on Taiwan and has reacted with increasing aggressiveness to visits from Western officials and politicians.