Daily Tribune (Philippines)

China warplanes resume Taiwan harassment

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About 20 Chinese warplanes were detected around Taiwan, with 11 crossing a sensitive median line separating the self-ruled island from China, Taipei’s defense ministry said Thursday. It was Beijing’s first significan­t show of force since Taiwan’s presidenti­al election.

The ministry, which releases data daily on the Chinese military presence around Taiwan, said Thursday that 24 warplanes and five ships had been detected in the 24 hours before 6 a.m. (2200 GMT).

“Eleven of the detected aircraft had crossed the median line of the Taiwan Strait or entered Taiwan’s southwest and north (air defense identifica­tion zone),” the ministry said in a statement.

Democratic Taiwan has its own government, military, and currency — but China claims it as its territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under its control.

Saturday’s election was won by the Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s Lai Ching-te, whom China regards as a “separatist” entity. Beijing warned ahead of voting day that his win would bring “war and decline” to Taiwan.

China, which maintains a near-daily military presence around Taiwan, did not send an outsized number of warplanes and naval vessels in the election’s immediate aftermath.

But it drew first blood in the political sphere, with Pacific nation Nauru abruptly announcing Monday it would switch diplomatic recognitio­n from Taiwan to China, leaving Taipei with just 12 countries or states that still do.

The largest number of warplanes China has sent during a 24-hour window came in September when Taiwan detected 103 Chinese aircraft around the island. Forty of them crossed the median line.

The constant stream of Chinese warplanes and naval vessels around Taiwan represents a “grey zone” tactic that stops short of an outright act of war, conflict experts say.

 ?? GREG BAKER /AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Show of force Chinese fighter jet soars over buildings on Taiwan’s Pingtan Island, the closest point in China. Beijing’s bold move of sending warplanes across the Taiwan Strait following the latter’s presidenti­al election sends shockwaves across the region.
GREG BAKER /AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Show of force Chinese fighter jet soars over buildings on Taiwan’s Pingtan Island, the closest point in China. Beijing’s bold move of sending warplanes across the Taiwan Strait following the latter’s presidenti­al election sends shockwaves across the region.

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