Taiwan’s Defense Ministry on Tuesday said that China is deploying its largest navy fleet in regional waters in nearly three decades.
The deployment is bigger than its military drills of 2022, when former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had visited the island.
“The current scale is the largest compared to the previous four. Regardless of whether they have announced drills, they are posing great threats to us,” Sun said.
Ministry spokesperson Sun Li-fang said said the scale of the current Chinese naval deployment in the so-called first island chain which links Okinawa, Taiwan and the Philippines, was the largest since China held war games ahead of 1996 Taiwanese presidential elections.
Beijing has not yet commented on the exercises.
The ministry said China’s navy is building two “walls” in the Pacific.
“They are sending a very simple message with these two walls: trying to make the Taiwan Strait an internal sea” of China, senior ministry intelligence officer Hsieh Jih-sheng told reporters.
Military aircraft detected earlier
The ministry it had detected 47 Chinese military aircraft around the island.
The French AFP news agency cited a senior Taiwanese security source as saying that “nearly 90” Chinese naval and coast guard vessels had been detected in waters along the so-called first island chain, which links Okinawa, Taiwan and the Philippines.
The Defense Ministry said that 47 aircraft and 12 warships were detected in the last 24 hours. It added that this was the largest number of aircraft spotted near the island in a single day in the last two months, which saw an escalation in Chinese war games along the island.
A visit by Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te to the US last week invited more Chinese ire, threatening further escalation. China has been expected to launch military drills around Taiwan in response.
What has led to the latest deployment?
On Monday, Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said it was on high alert after spotting Chinese warships and coast guard vessels.
Beijing made no public announcement via its Peoples’ Liberation Army (PLA) or state media regarding increased military activity in the East China Sea, Taiwan Strait or South China Sea. But a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman stressed China would “firmly defend” its sovereignty.
The island of Taiwan regards itself as a sovereign nation, but China claims it as part of its own territory. Taiwan is heavily reliant on the US for military support to defend itself against China.
Lai is an outspoken critic of Chinese incursion, and Beijing has labeled him a “separatist.”
China has launched two large-scale military drills around Taiwan since Lai took office and regularly deploys fighter jets and navy ships near the island.
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tg/rmt (AFP, Reuters)