Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
US Navy video shows close encounter with Chinese warship – video

Taiwan Strait: footage released of near miss between Chinese warship and US destroyer

This article is more than 11 months old

US military says its ship had to reduce speed to avoid a collision and accuses China of violating maritime rules of safe passage in international water

The US military has released video of what it called an “unsafe” Chinese manoeuvre in the Taiwan Strait on the weekend, in which a Chinese navy ship cut sharply across the path of an American destroyer, forcing the US ship to slow to avoid a collision.

The incident occurred on Saturday as the American destroyer USS Chung-Hoon and Canadian frigate HMCS Montreal were conducting a so-called “freedom of navigation” transit of the strait between Taiwan and mainland China.

China claims the democratic self-governing island of Taiwan as part of its own territory and maintains the strait is part of its exclusive economic zone, while the US and its allies regularly sail through and fly over the passage to emphasise their contention that the waters are international.

During the Saturday transit, the Chinese guided-missile destroyer overtook the USS Chung-Hoon on its port side, then veered across its bow at a distance of about 140 metres, according to the US Indo-Pacific command. The American destroyer held its course but reduced speed to 10 knots “to avoid a collision”, the military said.

The video, released on Monday, shows the Chinese ship cutting across the course of the American one, then straightening out to start sailing in a parallel direction.

Indo-Pacific command said the actions violated maritime rules of safe passage in international water.

The Chinese ship did not attempt a similar manoeuvre on the Canadian frigate, which was sailing behind the American destroyer.

“Chung-Hoon and Montreal’s transit through the Taiwan Strait demonstrates the combined US-Canadian commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific,” Indo-Pacific command said. “The US military flies, sails and operates safely and responsibly anywhere international law allows.”

The US recently accused China of also performing an “unnecessarily aggressive manoeuvre” in the air, saying a Chinese J-16 fighter jet late last month flew directly in front of the nose of a US reconnaissance aircraft over the South China Sea.

The close-calls have raised concerns of a possible accident that could lead to an escalation between the two countries’ militaries at a time when tensions in the region are already high.

The incident in the Taiwan Strait came on a day when both the US defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, and the Chinese defence minister, Gen Li Shangfu, were in Singapore for an annual defence conference.

Li on Sunday suggested that the US and its allies had created the danger with their patrols, and was intent on provoking China.

“The best way is for the countries, especially the naval vessels and fighter jets of countries, not to do closing actions around other countries’ territories,” he said through an interpreter. “What’s the point of going there? In China we always say: ‘Mind your own business.’”

Austin had invited Li to talk on the sidelines of the conference but Li refused.

Most viewed

Most viewed