Chinese military rehearses encirclement of Taiwan after US Speaker visit

The Nation  |  Apr 09, 2023

BEIJING    -    China launched military drills around Taiwan on Saturday, in what it called a “stern warning” to the self-ruled island’s gov­ernment following a meeting between its president and the US House speaker.

Dubbed “United Sharp Sword”, the three-day opera­tion -- which state media said includes rehearsing an encir­clement of Taiwan -- will run until Monday, the People’s Lib­eration Army’s (PLA) East­ern Theatre Command said in a statement. Taiwanese Presi­dent Tsai Ing-wen immediately denounced the drills, pledging to work with “the US and other like-minded countries” in the face of “continued authoritari­an expansionism”.

China’s war games would send planes, ships and per­sonnel into “the maritime ar­eas and air space of the Tai­wan Strait, off the northern and southern coasts of the island, and to the island’s east”, said Shi Yin, a PLA spokesman. 

Pakistan lost to Hong Kong in second clash of AFC Women's Olympic Qualifiers

A report from state broad­caster CCTV said: “The task force will simultaneously or­ganise patrols and advances around Taiwan island, shaping an all-round encirclement and deterrence posture.”

The report went on to detail the type of weaponry China was putting through its paces, including “long-range rocket artillery, naval destroyers, mis­sile boats, air force fighters, bombers, jammers and refuel­lers”. Taiwan’s defence minis­try released a video showing soldiers loading anti-aircraft missile launchers, fighter jets taking off, and other military preparedness exercises. 

The footage included sur­veillance of China’s Shandong aircraft carrier, which sailed through waters south of Tai­wan earlier this week.

The 75-second clip, which in­cluded English subtitles, ended with a caption saying: “We seek neither escalation nor conflict, but we remain steadfast, ratio­nal, and serious to react and de­fend our territory and sover­eignty.” Exercises on Monday will include live-fire drills off the coast of China’s Fujian prov­ince, which faces Taiwan, the lo­cal maritime authority said. 

Pakistan issues 2,856 visas to Sikh pilgrims for Baisakhi

The manoeuvres come after a meeting between Tsai and US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in California.

China views democratic, self-ruled Taiwan as part of its ter­ritory and has vowed to seize it one day, by force if necessary. 

“These operations serve as a stern warning against the col­lusion between separatist forc­es seeking ‘Taiwan indepen­dence’ and external forces and against their provocative activ­ities,” the PLA’s Shi said.

“The operations are neces­sary for safeguarding China’s national sovereignty and terri­torial integrity.”

Taiwan’s defence ministry said eight Chinese warships and 42 fighter jets were detect­ed around the island on Satur­day. The ministry expressed “solemn condemnation of such irrational actions”, adding the detections included 29 jets that crossed into Taiwan’s south­western air defence identifi­cation zone (ADIZ), the high­est number in a single day this year, according to data collect­ed by AFP.

AJK President lauds Army Chief’s statement on Kashmir

China was using Tsai’s US vis­it as an “excuse to conduct mil­itary exercises, which has se­riously undermined peace, stability and security in the region”, the Taiwanese min­istry said. The drills also fol­low the departure from Beijing of French President Emman­uel Macron and EU chief Ur­sula von der Leyen, who were in China to urge Xi Jinping to help bring an end to the war in Ukraine. China deployed warships, missiles and fight­er jets around Taiwan last Au­gust in its largest show of force in years, following a trip to the island by McCarthy’s predeces­sor, Nancy Pelosi.

McCarthy, who is second in line to the US presidency, had originally planned to go to Tai­wan himself.

The decision to meet in Cali­fornia instead was viewed as a compromise that would under­score support for Taiwan but avoid inflaming tensions with Beijing.

IIOJK transporters to go complete strike on Apr 17

There were no immediate signs on Saturday of height­ened military activity on Ping­tan, a southeastern Chinese is­land that is the closest point on the mainland to Taiwan. 

A handful of cargo ships cruised through the waters near the coastline, while tour­ists in sunglasses and baseball caps snapped selfies on view­ing platforms.

مزید خبریں

Disclaimer: Urduwire.com is only the source of Urdu Meta News (type of Google News) and display news on “as it is” based from leading Urdu news web based sources. If you are a general user or webmaster, and want to know how it works? Read More