China To Make Taiwan Strait Military Drills Permanent

Beijing will conduct military exercises close to Taiwan’s shores and airspace on a routine basis, Chinese state TV reported . Chinese warships and jets will continue to cross the unofficial line of control with Taiwan.

The Chinese military will from now on conduct “regular” drills on the eastern side of the median line of the Taiwan Strait, Chinese state TV reported on Sunday, according to Reuters.   

The median line is an unofficial line of control separating China and Taiwan that warships and military aircraft from the two sides usually do not cross.   

Beijing launched large-scale live-fire military exercises around Taiwan this week in response to the visit of Speaker of the US House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi to the island. China considers the self-governing island its territory and opposes contacts between foreign officials and the Taipei government.    

Chinese warships and jets continued to train for strikes and amphibious landings off the coast of Taiwan on Saturday. Chinese state media repeatedly described the drills as a rehearsal for “a reunification-by-force operation,” while Taipei argued that the maneuvers are tantamount to a blockade of the island. The Taiwanese Defense Ministry said its Navy was tracking the movement of the Chinese ships.   

“Our measures are resolute, strong and proportionate,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters on Saturday, adding that the drills were being done in accordance with international law. He said the exercises are aimed at “disciplining the Taiwan independence forces.”   

A White House spokesperson, meanwhile, described the exercises around Taiwan as “a significant escalation in China’s efforts to change the status quo.” Read More


China announced new military drills in waters to the southwest of Taiwan after the original exercises were scheduled to wrap up Sunday, as China seeks to cut Taiwan off from maritime trade and security assistance.

China launched its largest-ever military exercises from Aug. 4 to Aug. 7 in six areas surrounding Taiwan in retaliation for U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit, a move China called “provocative” and said violated China’s sovereignty. China intends the renewed drills to form a “blockade” of the island and demonstrate China’s increasing control over it, state-run media outlet Global Times claimed Monday.

“As long as the Taiwan question is not solved, drills like these will not stop,” Chinese mainland military expert Song Zhongping told the Global Times.

Ongoing drills will “lock” in Taiwan from outside assistance indefinitely, the Global Times reported, citing analysts, and are expected to become “routine.”

China’s defense ministry did not announce special restriction zones, areas where normal sea and air traffic are prohibited, for the additional drills, according to the Global Times. Whether the exercises will involve live fire remains unclear as well.

Although airspace around the island reopened as the Chinese Eastern Theater Command relocated troops, Reuters reported, the exercises could continue to drive business away from Taiwan and hamstring global shipping, as nearly half of the world’s shipping containers pass through the Taiwan Strait. Analysts previously expected navigation around Taiwan to return to normal after the end of the original drills, as any disruption in shipping traffic will also damage Chinese trading, according to The Wall Street Journal.

21 of the detected aircraft (SU-30*8, J-11*6, JH-7*2, J-16*4 and KA-28 ASW) had flown on the east part of the median line of the Taiwan Strait and our SW ADIZ, flight paths as illustrated.

 

“In the face of military intimidation created by China, Taiwan will not be afraid nor back down, and will more firmly defend its sovereignty, national security, and free and democratic way of life,” Taiwan’s foreign ministry told Reuters.

The U.S. has a naval carrier strike group deployed in nearby waters to “monitor the situation” and will conduct routine transits through the Taiwan Strait sometime in the coming weeks.

U.S. President Joe Biden said he did not expect the drills to presage an official military operation against Taiwan while traveling to Kentucky on Monday, Voice of America reportedI’m not worried, but I’m concerned that they’re moving as much as they are,” he said. 

China claims a historical right over Taiwan. Aerial and naval exercises serve as to prepare the Chinese military for future reunification with Taiwan and draw attention to China’s case that “reunification is a must,” according to the Global Times.

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