China carried out assault drills near Taiwan on Aug. 17, with fighter jets, anti-submarine aircraft, and combat ships exercising to the southwest and southeast of the island, in what the countryโs armed forces said was a response to โexternal interference.โ
In an Aug. 17 statement, the Peopleโs Liberation Armyโs (PLA) Eastern Theater Command said the drills were โusing actual troopsโ and that โrecent U.S.โTaiwan provocations โฆ severely violated the peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.โ
Taiwan, which is a de facto independent country despite the Chinese regime claiming it to be a renegade Chinese province, has complained of repeated Chinese military drills in its vicinity in the past two years. The PLA drills have been widely viewed as part of a pressure campaign to force the island to accept Chinaโs rule over it.
The assault drills are different from those carried out as a matter of routine by the PLA. The Aug. 17 drills were held near Taiwanโs southwestern and southeastern waters, in both the South China Sea and the Philippine Sea, as well as the Bashi Channel that connects the two seas, according to the PLAโs statement.
โItโs special and rare that the PLA performs a military exercise in both seas. In the military sense, the PLA wants to show that it can cut the U.S. Navyโs transportation line via the Bashi Channel to the South China Sea [from the Philippine Sea],โ Su Tzu-yun, director of the Defense Strategy and Resources Division of the Institute for National Defense and Security Research in Taiwan, told The Epoch Times on Aug. 17. โ[The drills are] indeed a threat to Taiwan.โ
Assault Drills
The PLA suddenly announced the drills but didnโt release details regarding them. Taiwan closely monitored the drills and released related information.
Taiwanโs Defense Ministry said on its official website that 11 PLA aircraft entered the Taiwanese air defense zone on Aug. 17, including six J-16 fighters, two H-6K bombers, one Y-8Q anti-submarine aircraft, one Y-8G long-distance jammer, and one KJ-500 airborne early warning and control aircraft.
The ministry said in a statement that it had fully grasped and assessed the situation in the sea and air โand is prepared for various responses.โ
โProvocationsโ
The U.S. Congress enacted the Taiwan Relations Act on April 10, 1979, to support Taiwan in deference to Beijing.
The โprovocationsโ that the PLA claimed in its statement on Aug. 17 could include a meeting that was held last week, in which officers from the U.S. and Taiwanese coast guards discussed improving cooperation and communication.
On Aug. 4, the U.S. State Departmentย approved a saleย of $750 million worth of military equipment to Taiwan, which includes 40 self-propelled howitzers, 20 field artillery ammunition support vehicles, and other equipment, which angered Beijing.
Byย Nicole Hao