The Jerusalem Post

Taiwan tensions hint at China’s assertiven­ess

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

Media reports continue to highlight what Taiwan has said are Chinese warplanes making incursions into its air defense identifica­tion zone, according to reports at CNN and other media.

What is important here is that the incursions are symbolic of the direction the world is heading: China will be more assertive and it will work more closely with other countries that are also being assertive, such as Russia, Iran, Turkey and other states that want to challenge the West.

The recent news related to 56 Chinese warplanes, including 38 J-16 fighters, 12 H-6 bombers and two Su-30 fighters, as well as anti-submarine warfare planes and two large KJ-500 early warning planes. CNN says that the last major incident involved 39 Chinese planes on Saturday. According to FoxNews, the overall number over four days was 149 aircraft. These included planes that flew on Friday including 18 J-16s and four SU-30s as well as H-6 bombers.

The pattern of “largest incursion” is now becoming clear. Back in March, Taiwan also reported the “largest ever incursion by the Chinese air

force.” That included twenty aircraft.

Reuters reported that “some of the Chinese aircraft flew in the airspace to the south of Taiwan and passed through the Bashi Channel, which separates the island from the Philippine­s, Taiwan’s defense ministry said in a statement. The presence of so many Chinese combat aircraft on Friday’s mission - Taiwan said it was made up of four nuclear-capable H-6K bombers and 10 J-16 fighter jets, among others - was unusual, and came as the island’s air force suspended all training missions after two fighter jet crashes this week.”

Last September, Taiwan also said Beijing sent 18 planes, most of them fighter jets, into its air defense zone. “China’s military sent 18 planes including fighter jets over the Taiwan Strait in an unusually large show of force Friday as a US envoy held a day of closed-door meetings on the self-governing island claimed by China,” said Politico.

Last month, China also flew 24 jets near Taiwan. The report at the time said that “China’s People’s Liberation Army flew fighter jets toward Taiwan twice on Thursday: once in the morning with 19 planes, and once in the afternoon with five more. Taiwan deployed air patrol forces in response to the Chinese jets and tracked them on its air defense systems, the island’s Defense Ministry said in a statement. The jets in the morning flight, some of which flew in a long L-shaped path, were 12 J-16 and two J-11s, as well as bombers and an anti-submarine aircraft. Later in the day, China sent 2 J-16 and J-11 planes as well as an early warning aircraft,” according to Asahi news.

The pattern is clear. There were incidents in June and March. In mid-September, Global Times in China said that Chinese warplanes would eventually patrol over Taiwan. “Sending PLA fighter jets over the island of Taiwan is a step we must take. The move will pose a fundamenta­l warning to the Taiwan authoritie­s and bring about reconstruc­tion of the situation across the Taiwan Straits. It will be a clear declaratio­n of China’s sovereignt­y over Taiwan island, and create unpreceden­ted conditions for us to further implement this sovereignt­y. The ‘airspace’ over the Taiwan island belongs to the airspace of China.”

CHINA’S INCREASING assertiven­ess with its air force is part of its growing clout at sea as well. It is rapidly increasing its navy. This has led the US to conclude that it must also increase its naval power. The US, UK and Australia have signed on to a new pact. But it’s not clear if the US is a bit late to the struggle.

A recent major naval exercise involved six different navies – the US Navy, the UK Royal Navy, the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, the Royal Netherland­s Navy, the Royal Canadian Navy and the Royal New Zealand Navy – making up a total of 17 surface ships, which included four aircraft carriers.”

Stars and Stripes connected this to Taiwan tensions. These 17 ships and three aircraft carriers are clearly a big armada at sea. USS Ronald Reagan, fresh off its deployment to the Middle East, met the USS Carl Vinson and HMS Queen Elizabeth on Saturday southwest of Okinawa, the report said. Overall, these ships could have some 250 aircraft and helicopter­s on board. That means that this armada of ships could pack as much air power as most of the Taiwan air force combined. China’s air force has more than 2,000 aircraft, making it the world’s third largest air force.

 ?? (Ann Wang/Reuters) ?? A TAIWANESE flag is carried across the sky during a national day rehearsal in Taipei earlier this week.
(Ann Wang/Reuters) A TAIWANESE flag is carried across the sky during a national day rehearsal in Taipei earlier this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel