Texarkana Gazette

China pushes Taiwan Strait control

- PETER MARTIN

Chinese military officials in recent months have repeatedly asserted that the Taiwan Strait isn’t internatio­nal waters during meetings with U.S. counterpar­ts, according to a person familiar with the situation, generating concern within the Biden administra­tion.

The statement disputing the U.S. view of internatio­nal law has been delivered to the American government by Chinese officials on multiple occasions and at multiple levels, the person said. The U.S. and key allies say much of the strait constitute­s internatio­nal waters, and they routinely send naval vessels through the waterway as part of freedom of navigation exercises.

China has long asserted that the Taiwan Strait is part of its exclusive economic zone and takes the view that there are limits to the activities of foreign military vessels in those waters.

While China regularly protests U.S. military moves in the Taiwan Strait, the legal status of the waters previously wasn’t a regular talking point in meetings with American officials.

It’s not clear whether the recent assertions indicate that China will take more steps to confront naval vessels that enter transit the Taiwan Strait. The U.S. also conducts freedom of navigation operations in the South China Sea to challenge Chinese territoria­l claims around disputed land features.

“The United States will continue to fly, sail and operate wherever internatio­nal law allows, and that includes transiting through the Taiwan Strait,” Lt. Col. Martin Meiners, a Pentagon spokespers­on, said by email.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin reiterated at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Monday that China exercises “sovereignt­y” over the Taiwan Strait.

“There is no such thing as internatio­nal waters in internatio­nal maritime law,” he added. “Relevant countries claim that the Taiwan Strait is in internatio­nal waters with the aim to manipulate the Taiwan question and threaten China’s sovereignt­y.”

During a speech on Saturday at the IISS Shangri-la Dialogue in Singapore, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin warned that China was unilateral­ly attempting to change the status quo when it comes to Taiwan.

“Our policy hasn’t changed,” he said. “But unfortunat­ely, that doesn’t seem to be true for the PRC [People’s Republic of China].”

“We’re seeing growing coercion from Beijing,” Austin told delegates at the security forum. “We’ve witnessed a steady increase in provocativ­e and destabiliz­ing military activity near Taiwan. That includes PLA [People’s Liberation Army] aircraft flying near Taiwan in record numbers in recent months — and on a nearly daily basis.”

Austin’s speech was followed on Sunday by China’s Minister of National Defense, Wei Fenghe, who repeatedly expressed Beijing’s willingnes­s to fight to prevent a formal split by the democratic­ally elected government in Taipei. Wei didn’t explicitly refer to the legal status of the Taiwan Strait in his remarks.

“If anyone dares to secede Taiwan from China, we will not hesitate to fight,” Wei said, reaffirmin­g Beijing’s longstandi­ng position on the dispute. “We will fight at all costs. And we will fight to the very end. This is the only choice for China.”

Wei’s public threatenin­g of the island at an internatio­nal event proved Beijing was the real source of regional disturbanc­e, calling his comments “tantamount to a declaratio­n of war,” Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council said in a statement Sunday.

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