BusinessMirror

Taiwan threatens to shoot down any Chinese balloons

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BEIJING—AMID speculatio­n over alleged Chinese spy balloons, Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said Tuesday it would shoot down any suspected military object coming close to its shores from mainland China.

Maj. Gen. Huang Wen-chi, the assistant deputy chief of general staff for intelligen­ce, told reporters that the self-governing island was on guard for any incursions, but had yet to find any that had penetrated its defenses.

Balloons found so far around Taiwan were used for meteorolog­ical exploratio­n, he said. They were relatively small and light and would burst after rising to an altitude that could be threatenin­g. Taiwan has yet to find targets requiring a lethal response, he said.

“We haven’t seen such sophistica­ted spy balloons sent by the Chinese Communist Party in the waters near Taiwan,” Huang said, referring to the balloon shot down by the US earlier this month after traveling for days from above Alaska to South Carolina.

China, which claims Taiwan as its territory to be reunited by force if necessary, regularly sends fighter jets and other military assets into Taiwan’s airspace and sea-lanes.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin called the US downing of the Chinese balloon a“clear overreacti­on.”beijing says it was an unmanned airship made for meteorolog­ical research that had been blown off course.

The US military had engaged an“absurd and costly large-scale political performanc­e art show. We also advise the US side to be careful about overexerti­ng itself and spraining its back,” Wang said at a daily news briefing.

Thewhite House defended the shootdowns of three unidentifi­ed objects in as many days even as it acknowledg­ed that officials had no indication the objects were intended for surveillan­ce in the same manner as the highaltitu­de Chinese balloon.

 ?? TAIWAN MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE VIA AP ?? IN this photo released by the Taiwan Ministry of National Defense, Major general Huang Wenchi, the assistant deputy chief of general staff for intelligen­ce speaks during a press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, on Tuesday, February 14, 2023. Amid speculatio­n over alleged Chinese spy balloons, Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said Tuesday it would shoot down any suspected military object coming close to its shores from mainland China.
TAIWAN MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE VIA AP IN this photo released by the Taiwan Ministry of National Defense, Major general Huang Wenchi, the assistant deputy chief of general staff for intelligen­ce speaks during a press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, on Tuesday, February 14, 2023. Amid speculatio­n over alleged Chinese spy balloons, Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said Tuesday it would shoot down any suspected military object coming close to its shores from mainland China.

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