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FLOATING STEEL
China says spy ship operations 'in line with international law'
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 21, 2014


Builder's sea trials for new Coast Guard cutter completed
Pascagoula, Miss. (UPI) Jul 21, 2013 - The Fourth Legend-class National Security Cutter for the U.S. Coast Guard by Huntington Ingalls Industries has successfully completed builder's sea trials.

HII said the Hamilton underwent three days of tests of all ship systems, including propulsion, electrical, damage control, anchor handling, small boat operations and combat systems.

"It's a team effort to bring one of these magnificent ships to life, and the NSC team has performed superbly -- from the first cut of steel to the completion of a very successful builder's trials," said Jim French, Ingalls' NSC program manager.

"The NSC team continues to improve performance from ship to ship. By keeping the same management team and many of the craftsmen building each NSC, we have been able to incorporate hundreds of lessons learned, resulting in a significant learning curve improvement since the first NSC."

Legend-class National Security Cutters are 418 feet long, 54 feet in the beam, and displace 4,600 tons. They have a speed of more than 28 knots and a range of 12,000 nautical miles.

Ingalls has delivered the first three NSCs to the Coast Guard and three more are currently under construction.

Beijing has defended its dispatch of a spy ship to international waters off Hawaii, near where Chinese vessels are taking part in a US-led naval exercise for the first time, reports said Monday.

The defence ministry said the vessel's activities are in line with international law, reported the Global Times, which is close to the ruling Communist party.

Reports in the US quoted the US Navy saying that a Chinese surveillance vessel had been found operating near the location of the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) naval exercises, viewed by analysts as one step toward potentially repairing ties at a time of heightened US-China tensions.

Four ships of the People's Liberation Army Navy with an estimated 1,100 sailors on board -- a missile destroyer, missile frigate, supply ship and hospital ship -- are officially taking part in the RIMPAC exercises, which began last month.

But China and the US have found themselves increasingly at odds as Beijing seeks to assert its claim to disputed territory in the East and South China Seas and as Washington seeks to shore up its influence in the region.

China's dispatch of the surveillance ship is a reminder that relations remain fraught between the Asian giant and western superpower.

"The People's Liberation Army naval ships' operation in waters outside the territorial seas of other countries is in line with international law and international practice," the Chinese defence ministry statement said.

"The Chinese side respect the rights of maritime countries in accordance with international laws, but also wishes relevant countries could respect the rights Chinese ships are entitled to enjoy by law," it added.

US officials have affirmed that the ship is operating legally.

Previously, Washington has accused Beijing of harassing US ships operating in international waters of the South China Sea.

In 2009, tensions spiked after five Chinese ships surrounded and nearly collided with a US Navy surveillance ship in waters off south China, in one of the highest-level confrontation between both countries in recent years.

More recently, Washington last December issued a formal protest after the USS Cowpens warship was forced to manoeuvre to avoid a collision with a Chinese naval vessel in the same waters.

Beijing claims almost the whole of the South China Sea, even areas close to the coasts of other littoral states.

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