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China takes advantage of USS Roosevelt being crippled by coronavirus and threatens Taiwan with aircraft carrier and warship strike group as it increases military presence in the disputed region

China has taken advantage of the USS Theodore Roosevelt being crippled by the coronavirus by sending an aircraft carrier and fighter jets ...

China has taken advantage of the USS Theodore Roosevelt being crippled by the coronavirus by sending an aircraft carrier and fighter jets close to the disputed territory of Taiwan.  
Taiwan's Defense Ministry said the Liaoning, China's first operational aircraft carrier, and five accompanying warships passed first through the Miyako Strait, located between Japan's islands of Miyako and Okinawa, to the northeast of Taiwan, on Saturday.
The USS Roosevelt and USS Ronald Reagan are the only two US carriers in the Pacific, but both have been forced to dock due to confirmed coronavirus cases onboard, which effectively gives China free range in the region. 
With the US vessels in port, the Liaoning, which can carry up to 24 J-15 fighter jets, is currently the only aircraft carrier active in the western Pacific.
On Sunday, the Liaoning's carrier group, which includes two missile destroyers, two missile frigates, and a supply ship, sailed in waters on Taiwan's east coast and then into seas to the south of Taiwan, carrying out exercises, the ministry said. 
In response to China, the US Air Force and Navy put on a show of strength with a runway formation of a dozen B-52 bombers and other aircraft on Monday.
Taiwan also said its armed forces monitored the carrier group's progress throughout and 'completed relevant actions in response to ensure national security and protect regional peace and stability'. 
There was no immediate response from China's Defense Ministry.  
Liaoning and accompanying warships passed first through the Miyako Strait over the weekend. Pictured here, the Liaoning sailing with a flotilla of Chinese ships in April 2018
Liaoning and accompanying warships passed first through the Miyako Strait over the weekend. Pictured here, the Liaoning sailing with a flotilla of Chinese ships in April 2018
Members of the People's Liberation Army navy are seen on board China's aircraft carrier Liaoning as it sails into Hong Kong, China, in July 2017
Members of the People's Liberation Army navy are seen on board China's aircraft carrier Liaoning as it sails into Hong Kong, China, in July 2017 
On Sunday, the Liaoning's carrier group, which includes two missile destroyers, two missile frigates, and a supply ship, sailed in waters on Taiwan's east coast
On Sunday, the Liaoning's carrier group, which includes two missile destroyers, two missile frigates, and a supply ship, sailed in waters on Taiwan's east coast 
China and Taiwan have a long-standing dispute over the island's legal status. The Chinese government and many Chinese people consider Taiwan as a part of its territory, but many Taiwanese consider the territory a separate nation. 
Taiwan today, with its own constitution and democratically-elected leaders, is widely accepted in the West as an independent state.  
The USS Roosevelt, which is currently docked in Guam, reported its first death of a sailor who previously tested positive for the virus on Monday. 
Nearly 600 sailors on the aircraft carrier have now tested positive for COVID-19 with about 92 per cent of the ship's crew having been tested.
Officials said the USS Reagan is currently docked in Yokosuka, Japan, for maintenance, but crew members have also reported coronavirus cases onboard. 
With the US vessels in port, the Liaoning (pictured in July 2017), which can carry up to 24 J-15 fighter jets, is currently the only aircraft carrier active in the western Pacific
With the US vessels in port, the Liaoning (pictured in July 2017), which can carry up to 24 J-15 fighter jets, is currently the only aircraft carrier active in the western Pacific
In response to China, the US Air Force and Navy put on a show of strength with a runway formation of a dozen B-52 bombers and other aircraft on Monday
In response to China, the US Air Force and Navy put on a show of strength with a runway formation of a dozen B-52 bombers and other aircraft on Monday

The USS Carl Vinson, which is docked in Puget Sound naval base in Washington for maintenance, also has sailors diagnosed with the bug.
The USS Nimitz recently became the fourth US aircraft carrier with a confirmed coronavirus case onboard. 
In addition to the Liaoning, China has a recently-completed Shandong, rumored to have cost $9billion and stationed at Hainan Island, the country's southernmost point. 
The US has 11 aircraft carriers - but two are deployed to the Middle East, and five are in US ports undergoing long-term services and overhauls.  
Taiwan has complained of an increased Chinese military presence near the island in the past few weeks, and has told China is should be concentrating on fighting the new coronavirus rather than menacing the island. 
The USS Roosevelt (pictured in 2017) and USS Ronald Reagan are the only two US carriers in the Pacific, but both have been forced to dock due to confirmed coronavirus cases onboard, which effectively gives China free range in the region
The USS Roosevelt (pictured in 2017) and USS Ronald Reagan are the only two US carriers in the Pacific, but both have been forced to dock due to confirmed coronavirus cases onboard, which effectively gives China free range in the region
Officials said the USS Reagan (pictured in 2018) is currently docked in Yokosuka, Japan, for maintenance, but crew members have also reported coronavirus cases onboard
Officials said the USS Reagan (pictured in 2018) is currently docked in Yokosuka, Japan, for maintenance, but crew members have also reported coronavirus cases onboard
The US military has also been active in waters near Taiwan recently.
A US Navy guided-missile destroyer sailed through the Taiwan Strait on Friday, the same day that Chinese fighter jets drilled in waters close to the island.
Last month, the US destroyer USS McCampbell sailed through the Taiwan Strait. 
The guided missile destroyer had transited the strait on a 'routine mission' through the waterway, according to Taiwan's Defense Ministry.
The potential crippling of the US Navy in the Pacific is alarming news given escalating tensions between Beijing and Washington in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. 
Beijing and Washington have traded barbs over the origin of the coronavirus, with President Donald Trump angering Beijing by calling it the 'China virus'.
Senior Chinese officials have also spread conspiracy theories about the virus' origin.

POWER AND MIGHT: CHINA'S TWO AIRCRAFT CARRIERS

China has made drastic advancements in its military capabilities in recent years, and will boast the world's biggest Navy by 2035, according to the US Naval Institute. 
The country already has two aircraft carriers, and is said to have plans to construct two more in the next few years. 
China's government first purchased a partially completed carrier from Ukraine in 1998, and spent more than a decade completely refurbishing it. 
The carrier - named Liaoning - is docked at Dalian Naval Base in the country's northeast. It entered into service in 2012. 
Like the Liaoning, the Shandong uses a ski-jump style ramp to launch its planes (pictured)
Like the Liaoning, the Shandong uses a ski-jump style ramp to launch its planes (pictured)
China then funneled a reported $9billion into its second aircraft carrier - Shandong. The 65,000 ton warship can hold up to 6,000 crew, and is strategically based at Hainan Island, China's southernmost point. 
The carrier only entered service this past December, and Chinese President Xi Jinping's attended an official commissioning ceremony. 
Like the Liaoning, the Shandong uses a ski-jump style ramp to launch its planes.
Last month, South China Morning Post reported that Naval officials had tightened restrictions on the ship amid fears that coronavirus could spread among sailors. Those embarking and disembarking underwent medical screenings. 
According to the newspaper, crew members were prohibited from going ashore unless they had permission from  Captain Lai Yijun or Political Commissar Pang Jianhong. 
The ship was also subject to increased cleaning measures, with 'each and every corner of the vessel disinfected'.

Taiwan is China's most sensitive territorial issue and a potential military flashpoint. 
China has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control. 
From 1683 to 1895, Taiwan was ruled by China's Qing dynasty. After Japan claimed its victory in the First Sino-Japanese War, the Qing government forced to cede Taiwan to Japan.
But the island was under the Republic of China's ruling again after World War II, with the consent of its allies the US and UK.
The leader of the Chinese Nationalist Party, Chiang Kai-shek, fled to Taiwan in 1949 and established his government after losing the Civil War to the Communist Party and its leader Mao Zedong. Chiang's son continued to rule Taiwan after his father and began democratising Taiwan.
In 1980, China put forward a formula called 'one country, two systems', under which Taiwan would be given significant autonomy if it accepted Chinese reunification. Taiwan rejected the offer.
China still claims Taiwan is part of its territory awaiting reunification and views any passage through the strait as a breach of its sovereignty. 
The US and many other nations say it is an international waterway and Washington regularly carries out so-called 'freedom of navigation' operations to press the point.
Beijing has ramped up pressure on Taiwan ever since President Tsai Ing-wen came to power in 2016, as she refuses to acknowledge its concept that the island is part of 'one China'.
But the pressure campaign has won few friends among the Taiwanese.
In January, Tsai was re-elected for a second term with a landslide against an opposition that favored warmer ties with Beijing.
China sent its first domestically built aircraft carrier - the Shandong - through the Taiwan Strait in December just weeks before the election. 
That move was condemned by Taiwan as attempted intimidation.