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I just saw the satellite images and it’s quite alarming: China has concentrated thousands of vessels in the East China Sea, right off the coast of Japan. At first glance, it looks like routine fishing, but analysts are quite sure this is something entirely different.
Things between Tokyo and Beijing have become tense lately. First was the withdrawal of pandas from Ueno Zoo, seen as a symbolic message of distancing. Then came Chinese trade restrictions that hit sectors like seafood and rare earths. But what really escalated was the arrest of a Chinese captain recently 170 kilometers from Nagasaki, who reportedly was trying to evade a fishing inspection. The guy was operating what appeared to be a Chinese vessel dedicated to mackerel fishing.
Now, the formations you see in the satellite images are what’s truly concerning. In December, about 2,000 ships lined up in an inverted L formation stretching hundreds of kilometers. In January, around 1,300 more vessels positioned themselves similarly, remaining stationary for over 24 hours despite bad weather. This has nothing to do with fishing.
Analysts point out that many of these vessels belong to what they call the Chinese maritime militia, a civilian network working with the state in pressure operations without resorting to open conflict. It’s basically a strategy to saturate maritime spaces and complicate Japan’s response. The Chinese coast guard has broken records for presence around the Senkaku Islands, which Japan administers but China claims as its own.
The backdrop is Taiwan. Tokyo warns that any crisis on the island would be a direct threat to its security, while Beijing insists that Taiwan is its territory and does not rule out using force for reunification. Every maritime movement now carries strategic weight. Fishing boats, coast guard ships, even Chinese aircraft carriers near Okinawa—all point to a maritime control test rather than economic activity.
What you’re seeing is a pattern: China demonstrating the capacity for mass mobilization without openly resorting to force. With civilian vessels, they can alter the regional balance and send a message not only to Japan but to the entire Indo-Pacific region. It’s sustained pressure, calculated, and without firing a single shot.