After the military exercises in the two major waters, the Chinese Communist Party will conduct another 15 days of military exercises in the Yellow Sea

The guided missile destroyer USS McCain arrived in the South China Sea on Feb. 5. The USS McCain is pictured here. (U.S. Navy via Getty Images)

The Chinese military has announced a 15-day drill in the northern Yellow Sea, following exercises in the Bohai Sea and the South China Sea. The aggressive posture of the Chinese Communist military has triggered a chain reaction from the U.S. military.

The Chinese Communist Party‘s Maritime Bureau said on February 7 that the Chinese Communist Party’s military will carry out military tasks in the northern Yellow Sea in the Bohai Strait from 16:00 on February 7 to 16:00 on February 21, and that ships are prohibited from sailing in the four-point line.

This year, the Chinese military intensive exercises in the Bohai Sea, Yellow Sea, East China Sea, three major sea areas. January 31, February 1, the Chinese military in the Bohai Sea to carry out military tasks; January 31 to February 7, the Bohai Strait, the northern Yellow Sea to carry out military tasks; January 27 to 30, in the South China Sea, the western waters of the Leizhou Peninsula military exercises.

Moreover, since this year, the Chinese Communist Party has sent military aircraft to disturb Taiwan almost every day, and sent 13 warplanes on January 23 and 15 warplanes on January 24 to intrude into Taiwan’s southwest air defense identification zone (ADIZ), the largest scale of Chinese military aircraft disturbing Taiwan.

Meanwhile, the Chinese Communist Party and India continue to confront each other at the border. Reuters reported on January 29 that Indian President Ram Nath Kovind told a joint session of the Indian Parliament that military deployment to the India-China border region has been stepped up to protect national interests, and that India’s plan to procure a new batch of modern weapons is underway.