(Beijing News) The official Chinese official day before yesterday, the photos of the U.S. military commander "tilted their feet" to watch the Liaoning ship were selected on the 72nd anniversary of the establishment of the Chinese Navy.Some analysts believe that this photo that caused heated discussions last week can be selected as "fully showing the self -confidence and opening up of the People's Navy."
According to Global Report, the official public account of the Political Culture Center of the PLA Navy Political Work, "People's Navy", launched a set of 72 pictures to show the 72 -year -old development of the naval development yesterday.One of them was a photo of the Berke -class missile destroyer Masting, a Berke -class missile destroyer released on April 11, to monitor the Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning.
The "People's Navy" is said: "In April 2021, the destroyer of the Chinese navy aircraft carrier Liaoning and the US Navy had a close contact in the Philippines Sea."Shooting in the Sea of the Philippines on the 4th, two U.S. military officers were monitoring the water surface contact. "The U.S. military later deleted the photo.
It is reported that the 72 pictures in this series showed the most important or most representative incidents of the Chinese Navy each year from 1949 to 2021, so the 72nd picture corresponds to 2021 that occurred in 2021event.
Global Times quoted analysts that Chinese officials choose this photo as a representative incident in 2021 is not accidental.Navy's self -confidence in military power and professionalism.
Analysts pointed out that because the U.S. military was a publisher, it would naturally be regarded as "the U.S. military is monitoring the Liaoning ship."The US ship may even be the actual goal in training.
Lu Lishi, the instructor of the Military Division of the Taiwan Naval Official School, previously believed that the U.S. military disclosed the "tillers" photos, which means that the United States is a cognitive war on China and shows that the Liaoning ship is not the threat of the U.S. military.