Asia: China exercises live fire during maneuvers around Taiwan

Asia

China exercises live fire during maneuvers around Taiwan

Beijing has been carrying out major maneuvers around Taiwan for three days to protest against the meeting between the Taiwanese president and a senior American parliamentarian.

Published

Over the weekend, the Taiwanese Defense Ministry detected about 150 Chinese ships and aircraft.

AFP

China is organizing live-fire maneuvers in the Taiwan Strait on Monday, the third day of a “total encirclement” exercise to protest against the meeting of its president with a senior American official.

During the weekend, fighter planes and warships had simulated targeted bombardments against the island, as part of this operation called “Joint Sword” and denounced by Taiwan. The United States called on Beijing to “restrain”. The goal? Simulate a “total encirclement” of the territory of 23 million inhabitants claimed by Beijing.

China has thus sent planes, ships and troops into “sea and airspace” all around the island, the army said. Something to worry the population: “We ordinary people just want a simple and stable life,” Lin Ke-qiang, a 60-year-old resident of Beigan Island in the Matsu archipelago, told AFP. , which belongs to Taiwan but is visible from the Chinese coast.

“Authoritarian expansionism”

On Sunday, the Chinese military simulated ‘precision strikes’ against ‘key targets on the island of Taiwan and surrounding waters’, involving dozens of aircraft and ground troops, according to state television. State, specifying that this deployment “will continue to maintain a close encirclement of the island”.

The air forces also sent dozens of aircraft to “fly over the targeted airspace” and, on the ground, the army launched maneuvers for “precision fire at several targets”, according to the same source. On Saturday, President Tsai Ing-wen denounced China’s “authoritarian expansionism” and assured that Taiwan “will continue to work with the United States and other countries (…) to uphold the values ​​of freedom and democracy” .

The Chinese maneuvers were launched after a meeting last Wednesday in California of the president with the speaker of the House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy. The US State Department reiterated its call on Saturday “not to change the status quo”, while the Pentagon said it was “following events closely”.

China views with displeasure the rapprochement in recent years between the Taiwanese authorities and the United States which, despite the absence of official relations, provides the island with substantial military support. And it considers Taiwan as a province that it has not yet managed to reunify with the rest of its territory since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949. It aims for this reunification, by force if necessary.

‘Serious warning’

Monday’s live-fire exercises will be held in the Taiwan Strait near the coast of Fujian (east), the province facing the island, according to local Chinese maritime authorities. It is located 80 kilometers south of the Matsu Archipelago and 190 kilometers from Taipei.

According to the same source, they will be conducted between 07:00 (01:00 in Switzerland Monday) and 20:00 (14:00 Monday), around Pingtan, an island which is the closest point between China and Taiwan. The maneuvers “serve as serious warnings against collusion between separatist forces seeking Taiwan independence and outside forces, as well as their provocative activities”, warned a spokesman for the Chinese army, Shi Yi.

Early Monday, an AFP team on site in Pingtan saw no increased military activity. On Sunday, the Taiwanese Ministry of Defense said it had detected 11 Chinese warships and 70 planes around the island, an armada broadly similar to that recorded on Saturday.

He said 45 aircraft crossed the median line between Taiwan and mainland China on Saturday, the highest number since the start of the year, according to data compiled by AFP. Over the weekend, the ministry detected about 150 Chinese boats and aircraft, including fighter jets, drones, bombers and transport vehicles.

(AFP)Show comments

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.