China's latest weapon against Taiwan: the sand dredger
Send a link to a friend
[February 05, 2021]
By Yimou Lee
ON BOARD THE TAIWAN COAST GUARD SHIP
PP-10062, East China Sea (Reuters) - Taiwanese coast guard commander Lin
Chie-ming is on the frontline of a new type of warfare that China is
waging against Taiwan. China's weapon? Sand.
On a chilly morning in late January, Lin, clad in an orange uniform,
stood on the rolling deck of his boat as it patrolled in choppy waters
off the Taiwan-run Matsu Islands. A few kilometers away, the Chinese
coast was faintly visible from Lin's boat. He was on the lookout for
Chinese sand-dredging ships encroaching on waters controlled by Taiwan.
The Chinese goal, Taiwanese officials say: pressure Taiwan by tying down
the island democracy's naval defenses and undermining the livelihoods of
Matsu residents.
Half an hour into the patrol, Lin's nine-man crew spotted two 3,000-ton
dredgers, dwarfing their 100-ton vessel. Parked just outside Taiwan's
waters, neither of the dredgers clearly displayed their names, making it
difficult for a crew member to identify them as he peered through
binoculars.
Upon spotting Lin's boat, armed with two water cannons and a machine
gun, the dredgers quickly pulled up anchor and headed back toward the
Chinese coast.
"They think this area is part of China's territory," said Lin, referring
to Chinese dredgers that have been intruding into Matsu's waters. "They
usually leave after we drive them away, but they come back again after
we go away."
The sand-dredging is one weapon China is using against Taiwan in a
campaign of so-called gray-zone warfare, which entails using irregular
tactics to exhaust a foe without actually resorting to open combat.
Since June last year, Chinese dredgers have been swarming around the
Matsu Islands, dropping anchor and scooping up vast amounts of sand from
the ocean bed for construction projects in China.
The ploy is taxing for Taiwan's civilian-run Coast Guard Administration,
which is now conducting round-the-clock patrols in an effort to repel
the Chinese vessels. Taiwanese officials and Matsu residents say the
dredging forays have had other corrosive impacts - disrupting the local
economy, damaging undersea communication cables and intimidating
residents and tourists to the islands. Local officials also fear that
the dredging is destroying marine life nearby.
To see the interactive version of this story open this link: https://tmsnrt.rs/39OYbAZ
Besides Matsu, where 13,300 people live, the coast guard says China has
also been dredging in the shallow waters near the median line of the
Taiwan Strait, which has long served as an unofficial buffer separating
China and Taiwan.
Last year, Taiwan expelled nearly 4,000 Chinese sand-dredgers and
sand-transporting vessels from waters under its control, most of them in
the area close to the median line, according to Taiwan's coast guard.
That's a 560% jump over the 600 Chinese vessels that were repelled in
all of 2019.
In Matsu, there were also many Chinese vessels that sailed close to
Taiwanese waters without actually entering, forcing the coast guard to
be on constant alert.
The dredging is a "gray-zone strategy with Chinese characteristics,"
said Su Tzu-yun, an associate research fellow at Taiwan's top military
think tank, the Institute for National Defense and Security Research.
"You dredge for sand on the one hand, but if you can also put pressure
on Taiwan, then that's great, too."
'PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE'
Sand is just part of the gray-zone campaign. China, which claims
democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory, has been using
other irregular tactics to wear down the island of 23 million. The most
dramatic: In recent months, the People's Liberation Army, China's
military, has been dispatching warplanes in menacing forays toward the
island. Taiwan has been scrambling military aircraft on an almost daily
basis to head off the threat, placing an onerous burden on its air
force.
Taiwanese military officials and Western analysts say China's gray-zone
tactics are meant to drain the resources and erode the will of the
island's armed forces - and make such harassment so routine that the
world grows inured to it. China's sand dredging, said one Taiwanese
security official investigating the matter, is "part of their
psychological warfare against Taiwan, similar to what they are doing in
Taiwan's southwestern airspace," where the Chinese jets are intruding.
China's Taiwan Affairs Office said in a statement to Reuters that
Taiwan's claims that Beijing is allowing sand-dredging boats to engage
in "illegal operations" near Matsu and the median line are baseless. The
office did say it has taken steps to stop illegal sand-dredging, without
elaborating.
The office also said Taiwan is "an inseparable part of China." Taiwanese
authorities, it alleged, are using their claims of control over the
waters near the islands to "detain mainland boats and even resorting to
dangerous and violent means in their treatment of mainland crews."
Asked about China's gray-zone actions, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs
Council, which oversees policy toward China, said the Chinese Communist
Party was engaging in "harassment" with the aim of putting pressure on
Taiwan. The council said the government had recently increased penalties
for illegal dredging in its waters.
Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense did not respond to questions.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has not ruled out the use of force to
subdue Taiwan. If he succeeds - by gray-zone tactics or outright war -
it would dramatically undermine America's decades of strategic dominance
in the Asia-Pacific region and propel China toward preeminence in the
area.
The Matsu Islands are almost an hour by plane from Taipei. They are one
of a handful of island groups close to China's coast that Taiwan has
governed since 1949, when the defeated Republic of China government,
under Chiang Kai-shek, fled to Taiwan after losing the Chinese civil
war. The Matsu, Kinmen and Pratas island groups lie several hundred
kilometers from mainland Taiwan. Their isolation, and their much-reduced
Taiwanese military presence since the end of the Cold War, would make
them highly vulnerable to a Chinese attack.
Matsu is just nine kilometers from the Chinese coastline at the closest
point. The island has a total of just nine coast guard ships, ranging
from 10 to 100 tons. On some days, government officials said, the coast
guard has faced hundreds of Chinese vessels, ranging in size from 1,000
to 3,000 tons, in and around the island's waters. Taiwan says those
waters extend six kilometers out from the coastline here. China doesn't
officially recognize any claims of sovereignty by Taiwan.
[to top of second column]
|
A sand-dredging ship with a Chinese flag is seen in the waters off
the Taiwan-controlled Matsu islands, January 28, 2021. Picture taken
January 28, 2021. REUTERS/Ann Wang
At one point last year, more than 200 Chinese sand-dredging and
transport boats were spotted operating south of Nangan, the main
Matsu islet, three Taiwanese officials told Reuters. Lin, the coast
guard commander, recalls a similar scene playing out on the morning
of Oct. 25, when he and his colleagues encountered an armada of
roughly 100 Chinese boats. That day, he said, his team expelled
seven Chinese vessels that breached Matsu waters.
"People were frightened by the scene," he said, referring to local
residents. "They were speculating about the purpose of the mainland
boats and whether they would pose a security threat to the Matsu
region."
NEW BOATS
In some stand-offs, Taiwan's coast guard has sprayed high-power
water cannons at the Chinese ships in an attempt to drive them away.
Last year, Taiwan impounded four Chinese vessels and detained 37
crew members, according to the coast guard. Ten of those arrested
were given sentences of six to seven months in prison. The others
are still on trial, the coast guard said.
Taiwan is in the process of beefing up its coast guard, partly in
response to the dredging threat. Last year, President Tsai Ing-wen
commissioned into service the first of a new class of coast guard
vessel, based on the design of an "aircraft-carrier killer," a
missile boat for the navy.
More than 100 new coast guard boats will be built in the next
decade, Tsai said in December, vowing to enforce a crackdown with
"no mercy" on Chinese dredging in Taiwan waters. In the meantime,
larger patrol boats were sent to temporarily reinforce the coast
guard in Matsu, whose 117 members are now conducting 24-hour
patrols.
The number of sand dredgers off the coast of Matsu dropped
significantly at the end of last year, as winter weather brought
rougher seas that make dredging difficult. When the seasons change
and the seas are calmer, local residents fear that dredgers will be
back.
From the late 1950s through to the late 1970s, Chinese forces
occasionally bombarded the Matsu Islands with artillery shells.
Remnants of that era are still visible across the island group, from
old air-raid tunnels to anti-Communist slogans displayed on the
rugged cliffs of Nangan island.
Today, Matsu is a popular tourist destination. Its picturesque
old-stone homes have been turned into fashionable guest houses.
But locals say China's dredging tactics are hurting their
livelihoods. Chen Kuo-chiang, who runs a seafood restaurant on
Nangan, says the dredging has led to a drastic decline in the number
of fish he catches off the island. Three years ago, he was hooking a
dozen a day with his rod, said Chen, 39, as he stood fishing on some
rocks in a Nangan port. Now, he said, he struggles to catch one or
two.
The fears of a Chinese invasion are palpable on Nangan. Chen thinks
the sand dredging might be a precursor to an attack by Chinese
forces. "We don't want to be ruled by mainland China," he said. "We
have freedom, which is limited over there."
Tsai Chia-chen, who works at an ocean-front bed and breakfast, said
concern was particularly high ahead of the U.S. presidential
election in early November. At the time, said Tsai, rumors
circulated that China might seize the window of opportunity with the
United States distracted by the election to launch an attack on
Taiwan. The large number of Chinese dredgers around the islands in
late October added to the anxiety, she recalled.
"Our guests were obviously worried," she said. "There was only one
small Taiwan coast guard boat, surrounded by many huge dredgers."
DAMAGED CABLES
On five occasions last year, the dredgers damaged undersea
communication cables between Nangan and Juguang, another isle in the
Matsu group, the three Taiwanese officials told Reuters. Mobile
phone and internet services for the islanders were disrupted, they
said. There were no such incidents in 2019.
State-backed Chunghwa Telecom said it spent T$60 million (about $2
million) to fix the cables last year. It also hired a local fishing
boat to conduct daily patrols to ensure the safety of the cables.
The coast guard said most of the fully loaded Chinese vessels around
Matsu have been seen heading with their sand in a northerly
direction, towards the city of Wenzhou, where the local Chinese
government has been touting a massive land reclamation project.
Known as the Ou Fei project, the area has been reclaimed for a new
economic zone. It encompasses about 66 square kilometers - more than
double the area of all the Matsu Islands. On its website, the
Wenzhou local government describes the project as a "major strategic
development for the future" of the city.
The Wenzhou city government didn't respond to a request for comment.
Following contact on the local level between the two sides, China
detained several dredging boats last month, according to Taiwan's
coast guard. But a Taiwan-initiated meeting with authorities in the
port city of Fuzhou to discuss the dredging was "postponed
indefinitely" and without explanation in late December, said Wang
Chien-hua, who oversees economic development in the local government
that administers Matsu.
Taiwan had been planning to use the online meeting to urge Chinese
authorities to enforce mandatory registration for dredgers and
punish those who go out to sea without reporting to the authorities,
according to an internal government note reviewed by Reuters.
The Taiwan Affairs Office in Beijing said the local authorities on
both sides maintained "necessary communication and collaboration" to
ensure order on the seas.
Aboard his patrol vessel, Taiwanese commander Lin sounded defiant.
The coast guard, he said, "will use force to drive away" Chinese
ships that enter Taiwan's waters.
"That way we can reassure the people in Matsu. At the moment, we are
capable of doing this job."
(Reporting by Yimou Lee. Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in
Taipei. Edited by Peter Hirschberg.)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |