China ends war games, Taiwan details warplane, warship surge
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[May 25, 2024]
By Ben Blanchard
TAIPEI (Reuters) -China ended two days of war games around Taiwan in
which it simulated attacks with bombers and practiced boarding ships,
exercises that Taiwan condemned as "blatant provocation" on Saturday,
detailing a surge of Chinese warplanes and warships.
Chinese state television's military channel said late on Friday the
drills had concluded. A commentary in the official People's Liberation
Army Daily said they had lasted for two days from Thursday to Friday, as
previously announced.
China's defense ministry did not answer calls seeking comment on
Saturday.
China, which claims democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory,
launched the "Joint Sword - 2024A" exercises three days after Lai
Ching-te became Taiwan's president, a man Beijing calls a "separatist".
Beijing said the exercises were "punishment" for Lai's Monday
inauguration speech, in which he said the two sides of the Taiwan Strait
were "not subordinate to each other", which China viewed as a
declaration the two are separate countries.
Lai has repeatedly offered talks with China but been rebuffed. He says
only Taiwan's people can decide their future, and rejects Beijing's
sovereignty claims. Taiwan's government has condemned the drills, saying
it will not be cowed by Chinese pressure.
Taiwan's defense ministry said it had detected 62 Chinese military
aircraft and 27 navy ships on Friday, including 46 planes that crossed
the Taiwan Strait's median line, which previously served as an
unofficial barrier between the two sides.
Chinese aircraft, including advanced Su-30 fighters and nuclear-capable
H-6 bombers, flew in the strait as well as into the Bashi Channel that
separates Taiwan from the Philippines, the ministry said.
On Friday it published footage taken by Taiwanese air force planes of a
Chinese J-16 fighter and an H-6 but did not say exactly where it was
taken.
Taiwan's presidential office on Saturday that China's military moves had
undermined the peaceful and stable status quo in the Taiwan Strait.
They "also constitute a blatant provocation to the international order,
and have aroused serious concern and condemnation from the international
community", it said in a statement.
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A Chinese warship is seen in waters around Taiwan. May 23, 2024,
Taiwan Defense Ministry/Handout via REUTERS
'COMBAT CAPABILITIES'
Taiwan Defense Minister Wellington Koo returned what his ministry
called the war operations centre to normal status on Saturday,
calling on personnel to "continue to grow their actual combat
capabilities".
Koo, like Lai, took office on Monday, having previously headed
Taiwan's National Security Council.
The Chinese military's Eastern Theatre Command, whose forces carried
out the drills, released a video on its social media accounts on
Saturday called "A six-word rhyme on smashing independence", set to
stirring martial music.
The words "advance, surround, lock-down, attack, destroy and
cut-off" flash up over footage of fighters, bombers, soldiers and
animated mock missile attacks on Taiwan.
China has over the past four years regularly staged military
activities around Taiwan, including large-scale war games in 2022
and in 2023.
However, senior Taiwan lawmaker Wang Ting-yu from Lai's Democratic
Progressive Party said the latest drills appeared to be more about
China making a noise than upping the ante, given it had to respond
to Lai's speech.
"They were comparatively more restrained than previous ones," Wang,
who chairs parliament's defense and foreign affairs committee, said
on social media.
Still, China has kept up a barrage of invective against Lai.
The People's Liberation Army Daily commentary, published as "the
voice of the military", said Lai was determined to act as a "pawn"
for external forces to curb China's development.
"If Taiwan independence separatist forces insist on going their own
way or even take risks, the PLA will obey orders and take decisive
action to resolutely smash all separatist plots," it said.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by William Mallard)
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