China stages mock missile strikes on Taiwan, jets with live missiles
used in drills
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[May 24, 2024]
By Bernard Orr and Yimou Lee
BEIJING/TAIPEI (Reuters) -China staged mock missile strikes and
dispatched fighter jets carrying live missiles along with bombers on
Friday, state broadcaster CCTV said, as part of exercises Beijing has
said were launched to punish Taiwan's new president, Lai Ching-te.
The bombers set up several attack formations in waters east of Taiwan,
carrying out mock attacks in co-ordination with naval vessels, it added,
as China tested its ability to "seize power" and control key areas of
Taiwan.
The two days of drills in the Taiwan Strait and around groups of
Taiwan-controlled islands near the Chinese coast, which a Taiwanese
official said also included the mock bombing of foreign vessels, started
just three days after Lai took office on Monday. Taiwan has condemned
China's actions.
China views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory and
denounces Lai as a "separatist". It strongly criticized his inauguration
speech, in which he urged Beijing to stop its threats and said the two
sides of the strait were "not subordinate to each other".
The Eastern Theatre Command of the People's Liberation Army said the
exercises, dubbed "Joint Sword - 2024A", were to "test the ability to
jointly seize power, launch joint attacks and occupy key areas".
"This action is completely reasonable, legal, and necessary to combat
the arrogance of 'Taiwan independence' and deter the interference and
intervention of external forces," said Wu Qian, a spokesperson of
China's defense ministry.

FIRST ISLAND CHAIN
A senior Taiwan security official told Reuters that several Chinese
bombers conducted mock attacks on foreign vessels near the eastern end
of the Bashi Channel, which separates Taiwan from the Philippines,
practicing how to seize "total control" of areas west of the so-called
first island chain.
The first island chain refers to the area that runs from Japan through
Taiwan, the Philippines and on to Borneo, enclosing China's coastal
seas.
The official, speaking anonymously given the sensitivity of the
situation, said several Chinese coastguard boats also conduced
"harassment" drills off Taiwan's east coast, including mock inspections
of civilian ships.
China's coastguard said it had conducted "law enforcement drills" in
waters east of Taiwan on Friday, focused on training on verification and
identification, warning and repulsion.
Chinese vessel Nantong carried out combat readiness patrol and practical
drill missions in the Taiwan Strait, with Taiwanese ship Zheng He
following 0.6 nautical miles behind, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV
said.
A public relations officer of the U.S. Navy 7th Fleet said it was paying
attention to "all of the activities" in the Indo-Pacific and takes "very
seriously" the responsibility to deter aggression in the region.
Taiwan and the United States have no official diplomatic relationship,
as Washington formally recognises Beijing, but is bound by law to
provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself and is the island's most
important international backer.

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Taiwan Air Force F-16 aircrafts fly during a patrolling mission at
an undisclosed location in Taiwan in this handout image taken on May
23, 2024, released on May 24, 2024. Taiwan Defence Ministry/Handout
via REUTERS

Speaking in Taipei, Taiwan Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung said the
island would not succumb to pressure.
"We will not make any concessions because of this Chinese military
exercise, because it concerns the development of democracy in
Taiwan," he said.
'SACRED WEAPONS'
The Chinese theatre command showed an animated video on Friday on
its WeChat social media account of missiles being launched at Taiwan
from the ground, air and sea, which then slam into the cities of
Taipei, Kaohsiung and Hualien in balls of flame. CCTV later said
China staged mock missile attacks on Taiwan using dozens of
missiles.
"Sacred weapons to kill independence," read words in red, written in
the traditional Chinese characters Taiwan uses, at the end of
animation.
Taiwan's armed forces have mobilised to monitor and shadow Chinese
forces.
Taiwan's defence ministry on Friday published pictures of F-16s,
armed with live missiles, patrolling the skies.
It also showed pictures of Chinese coastguard vessels and Chinese
Jiangdao-class corvettes, though it did not say exactly where the
images were taken.
The ministry said that as of 6 a.m. (2200 GMT) on Friday, it had
detected 49 Chinese military aircraft, 19 navy and seven coastguard
ships. Of the aircraft, 28 crossed the strait's median line, which
once served as an unofficial barrier though China says it does not
recognise it.
The closest Chinese aircraft got to Taiwan's coast was 40 nautical
miles (74 km) from the northern city, and navy base, of Keelung,
according to a map the ministry provided.
Lai has repeatedly offered talks with China but has been rebuffed.
He says only Taiwan's people can decide their future, and rejects
Beijing's sovereignty claims.
Taiwan is well-used to China's military threats, and the latest
drills have caused no undue alarm on the island, with life carrying
on as normal.
Taiwanese media have covered the drills, but also given a lot of
time to ongoing drama about contested parliament reforms that have
brought thousands of people onto the streets to protest.
On China's highly regulated Weibo social media site, "Eastern
Theatre" was the top searched item, with most of the comments
supporting the drills. Another hot topic was "the return of Taiwan".

Analysts, regional diplomats and senior Taiwan officials noted the
scale of the drills so far were smaller than the similar exercises
in 2022 and were widely anticipated by Taiwanese and foreign
officials, but they still raised the risk of accidents or
miscalculations.
(Reporting by Bernard Orr and Yimou Lee; Writing by Ben Blanchard
and Antoni Slodkowski; Editing Gerry Doyle, Michael Perry, Lincoln
Feast and Alex Richardson)
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