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China promises to build islands after teasing new aircraft carrier with video

In a teaser video, China teased?an aircraft?carrier that could be their fourth and first to use nuclear power. They also promised to continue building up?their islands as they look to increase maritime?power and secure resources, while bolstering territorial claims.

The video released?on?the eve?of the 77th founding year of the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy featured three fictional officers whose names are homophones for three commissioned aircraft carrier, the Liaoning. Shandong. and Fujian.

The video, titled "Into the Deep", showed a 19 year old named "He Jian" as a member of the group. This sparked public speculation about a nuclear aircraft carrier. In Mandarin, the name "He Jian" is a homophone for "nuclear vessel".

All three aircraft carriers in service today are conventionally-powered and have sequential pennants with the numbers 16, 17, 18?and 19. The age of the new recruit, 19, indicates that "He Jian", will follow the numbering convention.

The Chinese Ministry of Defence did not respond immediately to requests for comments on the video.

Beijing has spent billions to build a navy that can project power from far away. This goal dates back to 2012 when President Xi Jinping was appointed leader of the ruling Communist Party.

The video included military drills and attacks in the Pacific. But it also sent a message to democratically-governed Taiwan, which China claims as its territory, despite ?Taipei's rejection of the claim.

The video shows an exchange between a Naval officer and his son, "Xiao Wan", whose name is an allusion to Taiwan.

"I don?t want to leave yet." The boy replies, "I want to play a little bit longer."

"Don't be difficult, Xiao Wan," his father replies. Mum is waiting at home for you. "Let's go back home."

ISLAND BUILDING

In an article that appeared in the People's Daily official newspaper, the Chinese Ministry of Natural Resources urged for greater efforts to protect the 11,000+ islands China claims.

An official count in 2018 showed that the vast majority are within 100 km of the coast. Nearly 60% of them are in the East China Sea while the remainder is in the South China Sea.

China has constructed?artificial island, airstrips and military facilities over the years during extensive land reclamation in disputed waters of the South China Sea.

Beijing declared a nature reserve in September last year at the disputed Scarborough Shoal, which has been a point of contention between the Philippines and China for many years.

The CSIS think-tank Gregory Poling said that the facilities on the artificial island bases allowed Chinese law enforcement, military, and militia vessels to spend every day of a year patrolling the waters up to 1,000 nautical mile from the Chinese coast.

A senior Taiwanese official was not deterred by China's presence on the busy waterway from making a rare trip to the Taiwan-controlled Itu Aba island, which is part of the disputed Spratly Islands.

Itu?Aba's runway is long enough for military resupply flights to Taiwan. A new wharf that will be opened in 2023 has the capacity to host a 4,000-ton Patrol Ship.

This week, the Philippines, United States, and partner nations began military drills, including maritime operations across the?Philippine archipelago.

The exercises portrayed a multinational front in the?region that facilitates more than $3 trillion of annual shipborne commerce.

Poling, the head of the Southeast Asia Programme at this think tank, said that Beijing had reached a point where it was no longer worth its while.

It has failed to stop a single Southeast Asian project, supply or construction mission or anything similar in the last four years." (Reporting and editing by Clarence Fernandez; Xiuhao Xie, Ryan Woo)

(source: Reuters)