A U.S. Navy destroyer, the USS Rafael Peralta, recently encountered Chinese naval vessels during a patrol in the Western Pacific near Guam. The encounter, which occurred last month, was confirmed by U.S. Seventh Fleet spokesperson Commander Megan Greene, who described the interactions as “safe and professional.”
The encounter underscores the growing reach of China’s navy, which has been expanding its operations into areas traditionally dominated by U.S. and allied forces. The USS Rafael Peralta, an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer, is part of Destroyer Squadron 15, the U.S. Navy’s largest squadron forward-deployed to Yokosuka, Japan. The squadron is the principal surface force of the U.S. Seventh Fleet, which operates extensively in the Western Pacific and Indian Oceans.
The Chinese naval presence near Guam, a key U.S. military hub in the Western Pacific, reflects Beijing’s strategic push to extend its naval power beyond the first island chain, a series of islands stretching from Japan to the Philippines that traditionally serves as a containment line for Chinese naval activities. China’s recent operations include deploying an aircraft carrier group to the wider Western Pacific and conducting joint naval patrols with Russia. These developments come as the U.S. has redeployed its own aircraft carriers to the Middle East, shifting its focus amid rising global tensions.
Japan has also reported increased Chinese naval activity in the region. Last week, the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force observed two Chinese destroyers, the Type 052D vessels Nanjing and Lishui, as they maneuvered through the Yonaguni Gap—a strategic waterway between Taiwan and Japan’s Yonaguni Island—before entering the Philippine Sea. These movements were part of broader Chinese naval operations that included the Shandong, China’s first domestically-built aircraft carrier, conducting flight operations with its carrier-based aircraft in the Philippine Sea.
The USS Rafael Peralta’s patrol, which included freedom of navigation operations in the South China Sea and joint exercises with Japan, highlighted the increasing military tensions in the region. The destroyer’s official social media page initially stated that the ship had “protected Guam during Chinese and Russian deployments in the area,” but this post was later removed.
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