Taiwan accuses China of exaggeration with islands footage
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[August 16, 2022]
By Roger Tung
TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan accused China of
exaggeration on Tuesday after the Chinese military published footage of
the strategically located Penghu islands, where there is a major
Taiwanese air base, saying it was not true Chinese forces had come near
the islands.
China, which claims Taiwan as its territory, has carried out military
exercises around the island this month after a visit by U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who was followed by five U.S.
lawmakers on Sunday and Monday.
The Chinese military unit responsible for the area adjacent to Taiwan,
the People's Liberation Army's Eastern Theatre Command, released on
Monday video of the Penghu islands, apparently taken by a Chinese air
force aircraft.
Taiwan Air Force Vice Chief of Staff for Operations Tung Pei-lun told
reporters in Taipei that this was Chinese information warfare, though he
said he had no comment on who had taken the video.
"China used the exaggerated tricks of cognitive warfare to show how
close it was to Penghu - which is not true," Tung said.
Taiwan's Defence Ministry on Monday, in an update of Chinese air force
activity near Taiwan, showed on a map that the closest Chinese aircraft
to Penghu that day were four J-16 fighters.
The fighters crossed the Taiwan Strait median line - normally an
unofficial barrier between the two sides - but stayed closer to the
Chinese coast than Penghu, the map showed.
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Chinese and Taiwanese printed flags are
seen in this illustration taken, April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Tung said that Taiwan had a real-time "grasp" of what was going on
in the skies, and that Chinese aircraft have been operating to the
north and southwest of Taiwan and across the median line.
Penghu, a summer tourist destination for its beaches, is close to
Taiwan's southwestern coast, unlike the Taiwan-controlled Kinmen and
Matsu islands, which are right next to the Chinese coast.
Taiwan's armed forces are well-equipped but dwarfed by China's. The
island's president, Tsai Ing-wen, has been overseeing a
modernisation programme and has made increasing defence spending a
priority.
Defence Ministry spokesman Sun Li-fang said next year's proposed
defence budget had been submitted to the Cabinet for approval.
It is based on the "assessment of the enemy threat", military
development needs, and Taiwan's overall financial resources, he
said, without giving details.
(Reporting by Roger Tung; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by
Christopher Cushing, Robert Birsel and Gerry Doyle)
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