A new fleet of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy has departed from Qingdao, a military port in eastern Shandong Province, to assume escort duties in the Gulf of Aden and waters off Somalia, according to Chinese state media.
The deployment, announced by Xinhua on October 11, is the 48th such rotation since China launched its anti-piracy operations in the region in late 2008.
The fleet includes a guided-missile destroyer Tangshan, a missile frigate, and a supply vessel, and is equipped with two helicopters and a contingent of special forces personnel.
As noted by Xinhua, the naval group will replace the outgoing task force already operating in the region, continuing efforts to protect international shipping lanes from piracy and other maritime threats.
In preparation for the deployment, the crew conducted a focused training cycle. Exercises covered weapon employment, convoy escort procedures, and at-sea replenishment operations, the report said. These drills were intended to reinforce mission readiness and operational coordination ahead of the long-range assignment.
The escort mission reflects China’s ongoing naval expansion and its effort to maintain a visible presence in critical global sea lanes. Although piracy off the Somali coast has declined in recent years, China has sustained its maritime security role in the region through continuous deployments.
Since December 2008, the PLA Navy has operated in the area to carry out vessel protection operations, often in coordination with other international forces. The Gulf of Aden remains a high-traffic corridor for global trade and energy shipments, making it a focal point for naval missions focused on maritime security.
According to previous Chinese defense statements, the escort task forces have also been involved in humanitarian evacuation missions, joint exercises with foreign navies, and search-and-rescue operations in international waters. However, the current deployment is focused on convoy protection, particularly for Chinese and foreign-flagged merchant vessels transiting the region.
The move is part of Beijing’s broader strategy to project naval reach beyond its coastal waters and support its growing global economic interests. While the mission remains framed as a counter-piracy effort, the sustained presence of Chinese naval groups in the Indian Ocean has drawn attention from defense planners in the United States, India, and allied nations tracking China’s overseas military logistics network.