Miami Herald

China sends warplanes near Taiwan after U.S. rejects strait claims

- BY CINDY WANG

China sent its thirdlarge­st sortie of warplanes toward Taiwan this year, after the U.S. rejected Chinese claims over the Taiwan Strait and reports of arms sales talks with Taipei in Washington.

Twenty-nine Chinese aircraft, including six H-6 bombers and an electronic intelligen­ce gathering plane, entered Taiwan’s southweste­rn air defense identifica­tion zone Tuesday, according to a tweet from the Ministry of National Defense in Taipei.

Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu wrote on Twitter that the latest incursion showed China’s military threat was “more serious than ever.”

“But there’s no way #Taiwan will cave in & surrender its sovereignt­y & democracy to the big bully,” he added.

The deployment of warplanes was the largest since May 30, when 30

People’s Liberation Army aircraft buzzed the island as Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., led a threeday trip to Taiwan. Before that, China conducted 39 flights on Jan. 23 — the most so far this year — a day after the U.S. and Japanese held a joint naval exercise in the Philippine Sea.

The latest flights follow reports the Biden administra­tion has decided to reject a vague new assertion by China that the Taiwan Strait is not “internatio­nal waters,” amid concerns the stance could result in more frequent challenges at sea for the democratic­ally governed island. State Department Spokesman Ned Price reiterated at a Tuesday press briefing that the U.S. believes “the Taiwan

Strait is an internatio­nal waterway.”

“We’re concerned by China’s aggressive rhetoric, its increasing pressure and intimidati­on regarding Taiwan,” he added, “and we’ll continue, as we have said before, to fly, to sail, and to operate wherever internatio­nal law allows, and that includes transiting through the Taiwan Strait.”

Separately, Taiwan and U.S. officials are convening in Washington this week to discuss arms sales in meetings traditiona­lly characteri­zed as “monetary talks,” the Taipeibase­d United Daily News reported citing unidentifi­ed people. Taiwan National Security Council secretary-general Wellington Koo was set to meet U.S. defense officials, the publicatio­n added.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin urged the U.S. to stop selling arms to Taiwan on Wednesday at a regular press briefing in Beijing. “We consistent­ly and firmly oppose U.S. official interactio­ns and arms sales to, and military interactio­ns with, Taiwan,” he added.

China has ramped up military, diplomatic and economic pressure on Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party, which asserts the island is a de facto sovereign nation awaiting wider internatio­nal recognitio­n and not part of Chinese territory, as Beijing claims.

Two leading senators on the Foreign Relations Committee last week sought to overhaul Washington’s Taiwan policy, saying they want to deter any possible invasion of the island by China after witnessing Russia’s attack on Ukraine.

The “Taiwan Policy Act of 2022” would provide $4.5 billion in defense assistance to Taiwan over the next four years. It also would designate Taiwan as a major non-NATO ally and set up a “broad sanctions regime” to penalize China for any hostile action against Taiwan, including actions in the Taiwan Strait.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States