Taiwan’s foreign minister yesterday said China was using the military drills it launched in protest against US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit as a game-plan to prepare for an invasion of the island.
Joseph Wu, who offered no time-table for a possible invasion of Taiwan, which is claimed by China as its own, said Taiwan would not be intimidated even as the drills continued with China often breaching the unofficial median line down the Taiwan Strait.
“China has used the drills in its military play-book to prepare for the invasion of Taiwan,” Wu told a news conference in Taipei.
“It is conducting large-scale military exercises and missile launches, as well as cyberattacks, disinformation, and economic coercion, in an attempt to weaken public morale in Taiwan.
“After the drills conclude, China may try to routinise its action in an attempt to wreck the long-term status quo across the Taiwan Strait.”
Such moves threatened regional security and provided “a clear image of China’s geostrategic ambitions beyond Taiwan”, Wu said, urging greater international support to stop China effectively controlling the strait.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office responded to Wu’s comments by saying he was a “diehard” supporter of Taiwan independence, and his remarks “distort the truth and obscure the facts”.
A Pentagon official said Washington was sticking to its assessment that China would not try to invade Taiwan for the next two years.
Wu spoke as military tensions simmer after the scheduled end on Sunday of four days of the largest-ever Chinese exercises surrounding the island — drills that included ballistic missile launches and simulated sea and air attacks in the skies and seas surrounding Taiwan.
Pelosi said yesterday her visit to Taiwan had been “absolutely” worth it and hard harsh words for Beijing. “We cannot allow the Chinese government to isolate Taiwan,” she said in an interview with NBC News.
China managed to exclude Taiwan from the World Health Organisation, she said, but “they’re not going to say who can go to Taiwan.”
Her visit followed President Joe Biden’s directive that the US would focus on the Asia-Pacific region and had overwhelming bipartisan support in the US Congress, she said.
China’s Eastern Theatre Command said on Monday it would conduct fresh joint drills focusing on anti-submarine and sea assault operations — confirming the fears of some security analysts and diplomats that Beijing would keep up the pressure on Taiwan’s defences.
The command yesterday said it continued to hold military drills and exercises in the seas and airspace around Taiwan, with warships, fighters as well as early warning, refuelling and jamming aircraft “under a complex electromagnetic environment to refine joint containment and control capabilities”.
A person familiar with security planning in the areas around Taiwan said there was a continuing standoff around the median line involving about 10 warships each from China and Taiwan.”China continued to try to press in to the median line,” the person said. “Taiwan forces there have been trying to keep the international waterways open.”
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