Updated
Updated · CNN · Jun 25
China Sends 3 MSA Vessels East of Taiwan, Mapping Seabed Beyond First Island Chain
Updated
Updated · CNN · Jun 25

China Sends 3 MSA Vessels East of Taiwan, Mapping Seabed Beyond First Island Chain

3 articles · Updated · CNN · Jun 25

Summary

  • Three Chinese Maritime Safety Agency vessels sailed through the Bashi Channel this month to conduct law-enforcement patrols and seabed mapping east of Taiwan—the first observed MSA operation beyond the First Island Chain.
  • Beijing cast the mission as a sovereignty signal, with a semi-official account saying waters east of Taiwan should become China’s “nearshore waters,” while analysts said the move creates “new facts on the water” and extends gray-zone pressure.
  • Taiwan said the ships radio-challenged commercial traffic and warned China was trying to manufacture de facto jurisdiction; analysts said future steps could include stopping vessels or pressuring LNG shipments vital to the island’s energy supply.
  • The patrols followed Trump’s Beijing visit and may also have been triggered by Japan-Philippines talks over overlapping EEZ claims, suggesting China is exploiting diplomatic openings to widen its maritime reach.
  • The push coincides with Chinese activity at Scarborough Shoal, where a “research” structure alarmed the Philippines, reinforcing US and European warnings that Beijing’s incremental moves threaten regional stability and freedom of navigation.

Insights

With China mapping submarine routes east of Taiwan, is a naval blockade the inevitable next step?
As China’s civilian ships spearhead its expansion, are military alliances prepared for this new type of conflict?