Beijing appointed Rear Admiral Lai Ruxin as the political commissar of the Hong Kong garrison of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on March 28.
Lai is the garrison’s ninth Chinese Communist Party political commissar and the first commissar with a Navy background.
Before taking office, Lai was deputy director of the Political Work Department of the Northern Theater of the Chinese military.
Lai has earlier served in various roles in the PLA Navy, including being director of the cadre department of the Political Department of the South China Sea Fleet and the political commissar of the Guangzhou Marine Police District.
In June 2018, Lai served as the political commissar of the Naval Academy of China. In December of that year, he was promoted to the rank of rear admiral, and then transferred to the deputy director of the Political Work Department of the Northern Theater Command.
The CCP’s naval reinforcement came at a time when the United States warned Beijing against its aggressive moves in the disputed South China Sea while Beijing claims that U.S. activities in the area “raises the risk of conflict.”
Beijing is currently locking horns with Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Taiwan in a territorial dispute over reefs, islands, and atolls in the South China Sea. As part of that, China has built at least seven outposts in the Spratly Islands and 20 in the Parcel Islands.
Military Exercises
From March 28 to April 8, the United States and its ally the Philippines have been conducting a live-fire military exercise, one of the largest in seven years, in the northern part of the Philippines.The annual exercises, called Balikatan, (shoulder-to-shoulder), involve 8,900 defense personnel, of whom 5,100 are American. “It’s a way to make sure we can act together with our allies,” said Andres Centino, chief of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.
Currently, nearby Malaysia is hosting the armed forces from four nations—Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and the United Kingdom, in the annual Bersama Shield 2022 training exercise.
The exercise is ongoing from March 19 to April 22, involving 36 aircraft and three ships.
‘9-dash line’
A 2016 international ruling rejected the Chinese regime’s “nine-dash line” claim to about 85 percent of the South China Sea’s 2.2 million square miles. The ruling said that China’s claims had no historical basis and Beijing had violated the sovereignty of the Philippines by asserting territorial claims with its artificial islands built on reefs and sea rocks.The CCP has rejected the ruling. It has deployed coast guard ships and Chinese fishing boats, which sometimes have fishermen with military training aboard, to intimidate foreign vessels, block access to waterways, and seize shoals and reefs.