Taiwan ‘preparing for war without seeking war’ as China begins military exercises
OREANDA-NEWS Taiwan’s military has said it is “preparing for war without seeking war”, after China’s military began an unprecedented four days of live-fire exercises close to Taiwan’s shores on Thursday, in reaction to Nancy Pelosi’s visit to the island.
At midday local time, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV announced the beginning of “important military training exercise and organised live fire”, which are expected to include missile tests.
“During this actual combat exercises, six major areas around the island were selected and during this period all ships and aircraft should not enter the relevant sea areas and airspace.”
Notices of the exercises identified six areas encircling Taiwan, with warnings for all ships and aircraft to avoid the areas. Some of the zones overlap with Taiwan’s territorial waters, and are near key shipping ports. Taiwan’s defence ministry has accused China of in effect mounting a blockade with the actions. Flights and ships were still able to arrive in Taiwan, but had reportedly been advised to find alternate routes.
Ten minutes before the drills began, Taiwan’s department of defence issued a statement accusing the Chinese government of “irrational behaviour” with its live-fire exercises, saying they had “the intention of changing the status quo and disrupting regional peace and stability”.
“The ministry of national defence stresses that it will uphold the principle of preparing for war without seeking war, and with an attitude of not escalating conflict and causing disputes,” it said.
“The national army will continue to strengthen its alert, and troops at all levels will conduct daily training.”
The US House speaker arrived in Taipei on Tuesday night under intense global scrutiny. She met Taiwan’s president Tsai Ing-wen, as well as other political and business leaders, as well as dissidents.
She said US solidarity with Taiwan was “crucial” in facing an increasingly authoritarian China.
“Our delegation came to Taiwan to make unequivocally clear we will not abandon Taiwan, and we are proud of our enduring friendship.”
China’s government has reacted furiously to the visit since the plan for it was leaked some weeks ago. It had warned of countermeasures – an oft-heard threat in response to foreign acts of support for Taiwan, but which drew higher than usual levels of concern from China watchers. Analysts suggested Beijing had backed itself into a corner with its heightened rhetoric, and would have to demonstrate a much larger than usual show of force if it didn’t want to lose credibility.
The drills that began on Thursday are in unprecedented proximity to Taiwan, and included People’s Liberation Army (PLA) warplane incursions over the median line of the Taiwan strait – an unofficial border between China and Taiwan. On Wednesday night, just hours after Pelosi left for South Korea, unidentified aircraft, probably drones, flew above the area of Taiwan’s outlying Kinmen islands near the mainland coast, Taiwan’s defence ministry said.
“We immediately fired flares to issue warnings and to drive them away,” Major General Chang Zone-sung of the army’s Kinmen Defense Command told Reuters.
Several cyber attacks also struck Taiwan, targeting websites of the defence ministry and briefly taking them offline, the foreign ministry and the presidential office.
On Wednesday unidentified actors also allegedly targeted the ubiquitous 7-11 convenience stores, making all in-store televisions across the island display a message accusing Pelosi of being a “warmonger”. The text was written in simplified Chinese, used in mainland China.
On Thursday the threats and rhetoric from Chinese officials continued. China’s ambassador to France has said the Taiwanese people would be “re-educated” after any successful annexation by China, in a fiery interview on French television.
The ambassador, Lu Shaye, accused Taiwan’s governing Democratic Progressive party of conducting “extremist” propaganda and turning the Taiwanese people against “reunification” with China.
When asked about previous comments about “re-educating” Taiwan’s population, Lu said: “We will re-educate. I’m sure that ...the Taiwanese population will again become favorable of the reunification, and will become patriots again,” he said.
Online, many observers noted the term “re-education” is also used to describe Chinese authorities’ treatment of Uyghurs and other ethnic Muslims in Xinjiang.
Beijing claims Taiwan is a Chinese province and reserves the right to take it by force. Its Taiwan Affairs office said the dispute was an internal affair.
“Our punishment of pro-Taiwan independence diehards, external forces is reasonable, lawful,” it said.
Foreign ministers from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), meeting in Cambodia this week, called for “maximum restraint”, without mentioning the US or China by name. In a statement it warned the situation could lead to “serious confrontation, open conflicts and unpredictable consequences among major powers”.
At the Asean meeting, China’s foreign minister Wang Yi claimed Beijing had made the “greatest diplomatic efforts” but will “never allow its core interests to be hurt”.
“There is no justification to use a visit as pretext for aggressive military activity in the Taiwan Strait,” it said. “We call on the PRC not to unilaterally change the status quo by force in the region, and to resolve cross-Strait differences by peaceful means.”
In response China’s UK embassy accused the G7 of being “led astray by the US”, and told its members to “stop making wrong remarks relating Taiwan, stop interfering in China’s internal affairs, and stop sending wrong signals in any form to secessionist forces seeking ‘Taiwan independence’.”
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