Taiwan says China's threat remains, though military drills ease
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[August 11, 2022]
By Yimou Lee
TAIPEI (Reuters) -China's threat of force
is undiminished, Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said on Thursday, even
though Beijing's largest ever military drills around the island seemed
to be scaling down.
Furious about a visit to Chinese-claimed Taiwan last week by U.S. House
of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, China launched ballistic
missiles and deployed multiple aircraft and warships in recent days to
simulate sea and air attacks.
China said on Wednesday it would keep up patrols but had "completed
various tasks" around Taiwan, signalling a possible end to the war games
even while keeping up pressure.
Taiwan has also been conducting relatively small-scale, annual
exercises, scheduled before the flare-up and aimed at preparing to repel
an invasion.
"At present, the threat of Chinese military force has not decreased,"
Tsai told air force officers, according to a statement from her office.
Taiwan will not escalate conflict nor provoke disputes, her office
quoted her as saying, adding: "We will firmly defend our sovereignty and
national security, and adhere to the line of defence of democracy and
freedom."
A source briefed on the matter told Reuters that the number of warships
close to the Taiwan Strait's median line, an unofficial buffer, was
"greatly reduced" from previous days.
But several Chinese navy ships were conducting missions off Taiwan's
east coast and near Japan's Yonaguni island on Thursday, said the source
familiar with security planning.
Yonaguni is the Japanese island closest to Taiwan, about 100 km (62
miles) away.
Taiwan's Defence Ministry said in a statement it had on Thursday
detected 21 Chinese military aircraft and six Chinese naval ships in and
around the Taiwan Strait, of which 11 planes had crossed over the median
line.
That was down from the 36 aircraft and 10 ships detected the previous
day, when 17 aircraft crossed the median line.
'MILITARY PROVOCATIONS'
Taiwan has lived under the threat of Chinese invasion since 1949 when
the defeated Republic of China nationalist government fled to the island
after Mao Zedong's Communist Party won a civil war.
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A helicopter and boat under the Eastern
Theatre Command of China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) take part
in a maritime rescue drill, as part of military exercises in the
waters around Taiwan, at an undisclosed location August 9, 2022 in
this handout image released on August 10, 2022. Eastern Theatre
Command/Handout via REUTERS
China says its relations with Taiwan are an internal matter and it
reserves the right to bring the island under its control, by force
if necessary.
Taiwan's democratically-elected government says the People's
Republic of China has never governed the island so has no right to
decide its future or claim it for themselves.
"In the face of China's recent military provocations, the nation's
armed forces are right on the front lines, and its duties will only
be more onerous and the pressure will be even greater," added Tsai.
China's military did not make any new comment on its military
activity around Taiwan on Thursday.
However, the two sides continued their war of words, with Taiwan
reiterating a rejection of China's proposed "one country, two
systems" model for bringing the island under Beijing's control.
Only Taiwan's people could decide its future, the spokesperson for
Taiwan's foreign ministry, Joanne Ou, told a news conference in
Taipei.
China was using Pelosi's visit to Taipei as an "excuse to create a
new normality to intimidate Taiwan's people", Ou added.
In Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said
that "reunification" was inevitable one day.
"We are willing to create a wide space for peaceful reunification,
but we will never leave any room for all forms of secessionist
activities for Taiwan independence."
(Reporting By Yimou Lee; Additional reporting by Martin Pollard in
Beijing; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky,
Robert Birsel, Andrew Cawthorne)
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