City
Epaper

China's aircraft carrier breaches Japan's EEZ, sparks security concerns

By ANI | Updated: June 10, 2025 13:58 IST

Tokyo [Japan] June 10 : A Chinese aircraft carrier group visited Japanese waters over the weekend before leaving to ...

Open in App

Tokyo [Japan] June 10 : A Chinese aircraft carrier group visited Japanese waters over the weekend before leaving to perform fighter jet drills, according to a Taipei Times story.

The Liaoning aircraft carrier, two missile destroyers, and one rapid combat supply ship went around 300 km southwest of Japan's easternmost island of Minamitori on Saturday, according to a ministry statement, Taipei Times reports.

According to a ministry spokesman, this was the first time a Chinese aircraft carrier approached that portion of Japan's exclusive economic zone (EEZ). "We believe the Chinese military is attempting to improve its operational capability and ability to conduct operations in remote areas," the official stated, as reported by the Taipei Times.

China's expanding military power, as well as its deployment of naval and air assets to enforce disputed territorial claims, have alarmed the United States and its Asian-Pacific allies. According to the Taipei Times, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters that the government had "conveyed an appropriate message to the Chinese side," but did not specify whether it had submitted a formal protest.

Fighter aircraft and helicopters took off and landed on Sunday after the Liaoning and her escorting warships exited Japan's exclusive economic zone, according to a ministry statement. Japan sent its cruiser Haguro to the area to monitor the situation, according to a Taipei Times report.

The Liaoning cruised between two southern Japanese islands within the EEZ last month, from the East China Sea to the Pacific, while doing takeoffs and landings on deck, according to the ministry. In September of last year, the carrier sailed between two Japanese islands near Taiwan and entered Japan's contiguous waters, which extend up to 24 nautical miles (44 km) from its shore, according to the Taipei Times.

Tokyo deemed the measure "unacceptable" and raised "serious concerns." According to the Taipei Times, a state has the power under international law to regulate natural resources and other commercial activity within its exclusive economic zone.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalTN's special literacy push to see over 1,400 prison inmates take basic exam in January

BusinessRupee likely to bounce back in second half of next fiscal despite current weakness: SBI Report

International'Warrior Dividend': Donald Trump Announces $1,776 Christmas Bonus to Active US Soldiers

InternationalCautious recovery in India–US ties after 2025 'wobbles', says expert

CricketAshes 3rd Test: Lyon overtakes McGrath, becomes 2nd highest Test wicket-taker for Australia

International Realted Stories

InternationalUS Senator warns foreign-made generics may put families at risk

InternationalIndian origin wellness institute plans a million-participant meditation event, eyes Guinness record

InternationalUS, Russian negotiators to meet in Miami over peace deal to end Ukraine crisis: Report

InternationalPax Silica signals US shift from chips to full AI stack: Officials

InternationalUN chief calls for restraint, immediate de-escalation in Caribbean