Taiwan reports China's largest incursion yet to air defence zone
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[December 26, 2022]
By Yimou Lee
TAIPEI (Reuters) - Seventy-one Chinese air force aircraft including
fighter jets and drones entered Taiwan's air defence identification zone
in the past 24 hours, the island's government said on Monday, the
largest reported incursion to date.
Of the aircraft, 43 also crossed the Taiwan Strait's median line, an
unofficial buffer between the two sides that lies within the defence
zone, Taiwan's Defence Ministry said in a report, as Beijing continues
military activities close to the Chinese-claimed island.
Taiwan's official Central News Agency said it was the largest Chinese
air force incursion to date, although there was no sense of alarm on the
island, which has witnessed a steady increase in Chinese pressure in
recent years.
China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory, said it had conducted
"strike drills" in the sea and airspace around Taiwan on Sunday in
response to what it said was provocation from the democratically
governed island and the United States.
Taiwan, which strongly rejects China's sovereignty claims, said the
drills showed Beijing was destroying regional peace and trying to
intimidate Taiwan's people.
A senior Taiwan official familiar with security planning in the region
told Reuters that Taiwan assessed China had staged the military
"provocation" to express anger at a new U.S. defence authorisation law
that boosts military assistance for Taiwan.
The person, who declined to be identified as the information was not
made public, said during the drills China's air force dispatched
warplanes from several locations across the country to carry out
simulated attacks on Taiwanese and U.S. warships.
China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
The office of Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said Tsai will call a
high-level national security meeting on Tuesday morning to discuss
reinforcing the island's civil defence system, followed by a press
conference on new civil defence measures.
The statement gave no details, but the defence ministry has said it was
considering extending compulsory military service beyond four months, as
the war in Ukraine and rising tensions with Beijing renewed discussion
about how to respond to Chinese military pressure.
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Chinese and Taiwanese flags are seen in
this illustration, August 6, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
"The more preparations we make, the less likely there will be rash
attempts of aggression. The more united we are, the stronger and
safer Taiwan would become," Tsai told a military ceremony on Monday.
During the latest incursion, several Chinese planes, mostly fighter
jets, briefly crossed the median line in the sensitive Taiwan Strait
before returning to China, according to a map provided by Taiwan's
defence ministry. Seven Chinese navy ships were also detected near
Taiwan, the ministry said.
China's military also sent early warning, electronic-warfare and
antisubmarine aircraft, as well as drones, into Taiwan's southern
air defence identification zone, or ADIZ, according to the report,
which detailed Chinese activities near Taiwan over the 24 hours to 6
a.m. (2200 GMT on Sunday).
Taipei has complained of repeated missions by the Chinese air force
over the last two years, often in southern areas of its ADIZ.
Taiwan sent unspecified combat aircraft to warn away the Chinese
planes, while missile systems monitored their flight, the ministry
said, using standard wording for its response.
Taiwan's benchmark stock index brushed off the latest tensions,
ending Monday up 0.1%. However, China's CSI Defence Index marked its
best day in two months on Monday, rising 3.7%.
China has stepped up its diplomatic, military and economic pressure
in recent years on the self-governed island to accept Beijing's
rule. Taiwan's government says it wants peace but will defend itself
if attacked.
(Reporting by Yimou Lee; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Edmund
Klamann)
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