BEIJING — Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he complained to China's President Xi Jinping during a meeting on Tuesday about a Chinese naval live-fire exercise off the Australian coast that forced commercial aircraft to change course.
The exercise, held in February, saw a Chinese flotilla partially circumnavigate Australia in international waters beneath a busy commercial flight path in the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand.
The mission was widely regarded as a display of Chinese military strength and was among several issues raised in what Albanese described as a ''very constructive meeting.''
''President Xi said that China engaged in exercises, just as Australia engages in exercises,'' Albanese told reporters, referring to freedom of navigation missions conducted by Australian military in the disputed South China Sea.
''I said what I said at the time," Albanese added. "There was no breach of international law by China, but that we were concerned about the notice and the way that it happened, including the live-fire exercises,''
Chinese leader doesn't raise US pressure on allies over Taiwan
Albanese said the Chinese leader did not mention U.S. pressure on allies to declare positions on a potential war over Taiwan.
''I reaffirmed on Taiwan Australia's position of support for the status quo,'' Albanese said. Australia has a one-China policy that recognizes the People's Republic of China as the sole legal government of China and considers Taiwan a part of China.