US warship sails through Taiwan Strait during virus spat

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TAIPEI, March 26, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – A US warship has sailed through the
Taiwan Strait in a move certain to anger Beijing as the two countries trade
barbs over the coronavirus.

The US Pacific Fleet sent a tweet on Thursday confirming the USS
McCampbell, a guided missile destroyer, had transited the strait a day
earlier.

Taiwan’s defence ministry said the vessel was on a “routine mission”
through the waterway separating the self-ruling island from Chinese mainland.

The ship’s passage comes at a time of heightened political tensions between
the US and China — and after Beijing has repeatedly buzzed Taiwan with
military jets and ships despite the global COVID-19 pandemic.

Beijing and Washington have traded barbs over the origin of the
coronavirus, with President Donald Trump angering Beijing by calling it the
“China virus”.

Senior Chinese officials have also spread conspiracy theories about the
virus’ origin.

The Taiwan Strait is a flashpoint waterway for the world’s navies.

China still claims Taiwan is part of its territory awaiting reunification
and views any passage through the strait as a breach of its sovereignty.

The US and many other nations say it is an international waterway and
Washington regularly carries out so-called “freedom of navigation” operations
to press the point.

Beijing has ramped up pressure on Taiwan ever since President Tsai Ing-wen
came to power in 2016, as she refuses to acknowledge its concept that the
island is part of “one China.”

But the pressure campaign has won few friends among the Taiwanese.

In January, Tsai was re-elected for a second term with a landslide against
an opposition that favoured warmer ties with Beijing.

China sent its first domestically built aircraft carrier — the Shandong —
through the Taiwan Strait in December just weeks before the election.

Beijing’s only other carrier — the Liaoning — has passed through the
strait several times in recent years.