# China%20Coast%20Guard
Latest news and articles about China%20Coast%20Guard
Total: 17 articles found

Beijing’s Megaphone Diplomacy: Maritime Encroachment and the New Normal in the Taiwan Strait
Beijing is intensifying its use of maritime law enforcement to assert sovereignty over the Taiwan Strait, using direct verbal confrontations to erode Taiwan's administrative authority. This shift toward 'gray zone' tactics aims to normalize Chinese presence and dismantle long-standing maritime boundaries without triggering a full-scale military conflict.

Beijing’s Maritime Squeeze: The Strategic Significance of China’s New Coast Guard Frontier East of Taiwan
China has launched its first independent Coast Guard patrols east of Taiwan, marking a shift from military-led exercises to permanent administrative enforcement. The move is a direct challenge to Japan-Philippines maritime cooperation and aims to establish a 'new normal' of Chinese jurisdiction in the Western Pacific.

Beijing Signals 'New Normal' at Scarborough Shoal with Escalated Coast Guard Presence
The China Coast Guard has completed a month of intensified patrols around Scarborough Shoal, marking a strategic escalation in Beijing's efforts to exert administrative control over the disputed feature. These operations, framed as law enforcement, are designed to normalize China's presence and deter Philippine activities in the region.

Beijing’s New Front: The Coast Guard’s Strategic Pivot to Taiwan’s East
The China Coast Guard has initiated law enforcement patrols east of Taiwan, effectively completing a maritime circle around the island. This move serves as a direct response to maritime boundary talks between Japan and the Philippines and asserts Beijing's claims to a 200-nautical-mile EEZ in the Western Pacific.

Maritime Diplomacy: China Positions as Regional Coordinator at Quanzhou Coast Guard Summit
China is hosting the 22nd Asian Coast Guard Agencies Meeting in Quanzhou, focusing on maritime law enforcement and non-traditional security cooperation. The event brings together 18 nations to discuss search and rescue, environmental protection, and counter-terrorism, marking a significant step in Beijing's maritime diplomacy.

Beijing’s New Maritime Reality: From Rhetoric to Rule-Making in the South China Sea
China is transitioning from reactive diplomacy to proactive maritime enforcement in the South China Sea, utilizing a synchronized military-coast guard strategy. This shift aims to establish a permanent administrative presence that defines the regional status quo through physical control rather than rhetoric.

Beijing Normalizes Pressure: China Coast Guard Intensifies Presence in Contested East China Sea
China Coast Guard fleet 1306 conducted a patrol near the disputed Diaoyu Islands on May 7, 2026, as part of Beijing's ongoing effort to normalize its presence in the East China Sea. The mission reflects China's broader 'gray zone' strategy to challenge Japanese administrative control and assert maritime sovereignty through persistent law enforcement operations.

Soft Power on the Shoals: The Intellectual Consolidation of China’s Maritime Presence
Recent reports from the South China Sea highlight a program of intellectual and ideological development aboard China Coast Guard vessels stationed at Scarborough Shoal. Through the 'Maritime Frontier Library' initiative, personnel are studying maritime law and literature to sustain morale and professionalize long-term deployments in contested waters.

China Coast Guard Photos Underscore Routine Power Projection in the South China Sea
Xinhua published photographs of the China Coast Guard ship Sandu conducting boarding-and-control training during a South China Sea patrol on March 8. The images reflect routine law-enforcement activity that doubles as a low-intensity form of power projection, part of Beijing’s broader effort to consolidate influence over disputed maritime areas.

China Films Philippine Vessel Dumping ‘Unknown Object’ Near Spratly Islands, Raising Tensions in the South China Sea
Chinese authorities released footage showing a Philippine Coast Guard vessel discarding an unidentified object near the Spratly Islands on Feb. 16, a small incident that nevertheless amplifies tensions in the contested South China Sea. The episode highlights how filmed encounters and the deployment of equipment at sea serve as instruments of strategic signaling between Manila and Beijing.

Standing Watch While Others Feast: China Coast Guard Patrols the South China Sea Over Lunar New Year
China Coast Guard vessels, including the ship Yongshu, remained on patrol across the South China Sea during the Lunar New Year, conducting drills, evidence-gathering with drones and long deployments without shore contact. The missions blend operational preparedness with domestic political messaging about defending maritime rights while crews endure weeks away from home.

Under Beijing’s Pressure, Tokyo Quietly Urges Fishermen Away from Diaoyu/Senkaku Waters
Chinese media report that Beijing’s intensified coastguard patrols and economic pressure have prompted Japanese officials to privately advise fishermen to avoid the disputed Diaoyu/Senkaku waters. The episode illustrates how sustained maritime patrols and targeted economic measures can produce de‑facto control and compel rivals to change behaviour without open warfare.