Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

18 China warplanes fly over Taiwan Strait

Move seen as response to U.S. envoy’s visit with Taipei officials, business leaders

- HUIZHONG WU

TAIPEI, Taiwan — China’s military sent 18 planes, including fighter jets, over the Taiwan Strait in a large show of force Friday as a U.S. envoy held a day of private meetings on the self-governing island claimed by China.

Undersecre­tary of State Keith Krach, who handles the economic growth, energy and the environmen­t portfolio, held talks with Taiwan’s minister of economic affairs and vice premier. He also met with business leaders over lunch and was to dine with President Tsai Ing-wen later Friday.

In response to Krach’s visit, the Eastern Theater Command of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army held combat exercises near the Taiwan Strait, in at least the second round of war games this month aimed at intimidati­ng supporters of the island’s independen­t identity.

Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said two bombers and 16 fighter jets from China crossed into Taiwan’s air defense identifica­tion zone. It said it scrambled jets in response and monitored the movements of the Chinese planes.

Chinese Defense Ministry spokespers­on Ren Guoqiang called the drills a “legitimate and necessary action taken in response to the current situation across the Taiwan Straits to safeguard national sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.”

“Recently, the U.S. and [Taiwan’s ruling] Democratic Progressiv­e Party authoritie­s have stepped up their collusion and frequently stir up troubles,” Ren told reporters Friday morning. “Whether it is using Taiwan to contain China or relying on foreign powers to threaten others, it is wishful thinking and is destined to be a dead end.”

In a brief message on its microblog, the Eastern Theater Command said the exercises involved naval and air force units in the Taiwan Strait aimed at gauging their ability to carry out joint operations.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also defended the move. Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said China has the “firm will, full confidence and sufficient ability to thwart all external interferen­ce and separatist actions by Taiwan independen­ce forces.”

Beijing views Taiwan as part of its own territory and strongly opposes any type of formal interactio­n between other countries and the selfruled island democracy.

Krach’s trip follows a visit in August by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, the highest-level Cabinet official to visit since the U.S. switched formal relations from Taiwan to China in 1979.

It is one of a series of moves by the Trump administra­tion to strengthen relations with Taiwan, including stepped-up arms sales and support for the island’s participat­ion in internatio­nal forums.

Before Krach’s arrival, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Kelly Craft, had lunch Wednesday with Taiwan’s top official in New York, in a meeting she called historic.

Today, the last day of his visit, Krach will also attend a memorial service for former President Lee Teng-hui, who led the island’s transition to democracy and died at age 97 in July.

Analysts say the Chinese military response is a clear message to the U.S. to stop what it is doing, since the Chinese side took similar actions when Azar visited in August.

Taiwan said Chinese warplanes entered its airspace over two days last week during large-scale war games that it called a “serious provocatio­n to Taiwan and a grave threat to regional peace and stability.”

China has increasing­ly relied on military threats and diplomatic isolation to pressure Taiwan. That follows the apparent failure of its efforts to win over the island’s 23 million people to the prospect of political unificatio­n under the “one country, two systems” framework used in Hong Kong, with a large majority of Taiwanese favoring maintainin­g the status quo of de facto independen­ce.

“The signal from Beijing is very, very clear, but does that mean a prelude to war? No, far from it,” said Chong-Pin Lin, a former deputy defense minister in Taiwan.

China cut contacts with Taiwan’s government after Tsai’s 2016 election. She was reelected by a large margin this year .

 ?? (AP/Taiwan Ministry of National Defense) ?? A Chinese People’s Liberation Army H-6 bomber flies Friday near the Taiwan air defense identifica­tion zone.
(AP/Taiwan Ministry of National Defense) A Chinese People’s Liberation Army H-6 bomber flies Friday near the Taiwan air defense identifica­tion zone.

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