The US and allied navies plan to sink a 40,000-tonne ship at the latest Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise to simulate defeating a Chinese amphibious assault on Taiwan.
This year’s RIMPAC — the 29th iteration of the world’s largest naval exercise — involves the US, 28 partners, more than 25,000 personnel, 40 warships, three submarines and more than 150 aircraft operating in and around Hawaii from yesterday to Aug. 1, the US Navy said in a press release.
The major components of the event include multidomain warfare exercises in multiship surface engagements, anti-submarine warfare and multi-axis defense of a carrier strike group against live forces, it said.
Photo: AFP / US Navy / Dylan M. Kinee
The capstone event of the drills is the sink exercise, which is to utilize different classes of ships throughout the years, the War Zone said in a report on June 10.
This year’s target, the USS Tarawa, an amphibious assault ship, was the lead warship of its class and was designed to transport marines and support them with its complement of strike aircraft, the outlet said.
Although another Tarawa-class vessel was destroyed for target practice before, the ship’s impending demise is still important, as few opportunities exist for navies to test their weapons against a large and heavily protected target, it said.
“It [has] been a very long time since the navy used an amphibious assault ship of any kind for the RIMPAC [sink exercise], but [it] is the largest ship of any kind to be used in more than a decade,” the report said.
“Amphibious assault ships are high-value assets ... designed to be well-protected right down to their core structures and otherwise resilient to damage thanks to redundant features,” it said, adding that the USS Tarawa was more modern than the Iwo Jima-class types sunk in past drills.
The planned destruction of the USS Tarawa in the war games coincided with the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy’s efforts to expand its amphibious assault ship fleets, which would be “top target for US forces,” it said.
The ongoing RIMPAC exercise is meant to send China “a strong message,” analyst Richard Fisher Jr told Voice of America Cantonese.
The destruction of the USS Tarawa, the equivalent in size to China’s largest landing helicopter docks, would show the Chinese that the US Navy is capable of sinking their ships, he was cited as saying.
Taiwanese could risk being extradited to China when traveling in countries with close ties to Beijing, Taiwan Association of University Professors deputy chairman Chen Li-fu (陳俐甫) said on Friday. Chen’s comments came after China on Friday last week announced new judicial guidelines targeting Taiwanese independence advocates. Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and Djibouti are among the countries where Taiwanese could risk being extradited to China, he said. The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) on Thursday elevated the travel alert for China, Hong Kong and Macau to “orange” after Beijing announced its guidelines to “severely punish Taiwanese independence diehards for splitting the country and inciting secession.” Extradition treaties
Taiwan and Thailand have signed an agreement to promote and protect bilateral investment and trade, the Executive Yuan’s Office of Trade Negotiations (OTN) said on Friday. The agreement on “Promotion and Protection of Investments” was signed by Representative to Thailand Chang Chun-fu (張俊福) and Thailand Trade and Economic Office in Taipei executive director Narong Boonsatheanwong on Thursday, the OTN said in a news release. Thailand has become the fifth trading partner to sign an investment agreement with Taiwan since 2016, following earlier agreements with the Philippines, India, Vietnam and Canada, the OTN said. The deal marks a significant milestone in the development of
The entire Alishan Forest Railway line is to reopen for the first time in 15 years on Saturday, with tickets to go on sale at 2pm today. The historic railway from Chiayi to Alishan (阿里山) is finally set to reopen after the completion of the final No. 42 tunnel, Alishan Forest Railway and Cultural Heritage Office Deputy Director-General Chou Heng-kai (周恆凱) said. It is to run on a new timetable, with four trains daily, he said. The 9am train is to depart from Chiayi Railway Station bound for Shizilu Station (十字路), while the 10am train departing from Chiayi is to go all the
CROSS-BORDER CRIME: The suspects cannot be charged with cybercrime in Indonesia as their targets were in Malaysia, an Indonesian immigration director said Indonesian immigration authorities have detained 103 Taiwanese after a raid at a villa on Bali, officials said yesterday. They were accused of misusing their visas and residence permits, and are suspected of possible cybercrimes, Safar Muhammad Godam, director of immigration supervision and enforcement at the Indonesian Ministry of Law and Human Rights told reporters at a news conference. “The 103 foreign nationals stayed at the villa and conducted suspicious activities, which we suspect are activities related to cybercrime activities,” he said, presenting laptops and routers at the news conference. Godam said Indonesian authorities cannot charge them with conducting cybercrime. “During the inspection, we