China Stages New Round of Military Drills Encircling Taiwan
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TAIPEI, Taiwan—The Chinese communist regime launched a new round of military exercises encircling Taiwan on Dec. 29, less than two weeks after Washington announced a record $11.1 billion in arms sales to the island.
The Eastern Theater Command conducted drills across waters and airspace in the Taiwan Strait and north, east, southwest, and southeast of Taiwan. It deployed destroyers, frigates, fighters, bombers, unmanned aerial vehicles, amphibious assault ships, and long-range rockets for live firing and simulated strikes against maritime and mobile ground targets.
The live-firing exercises will continue on Dec. 30, China’s Maritime Safety Administration announced, marking the largest drills to date in terms of coverage and bringing the exercises closer to Taiwan than before. The Chinese military had initially planned the drills in five zones around the island.
Shi Yi, a spokesperson for the Eastern Theater Command, said the drills were meant to serve as a “serious warning” against what he described as “Taiwan Independence” separatist forces.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to seize the island through military action. Taiwan has rejected its communist neighbor’s territorial claim and is a de facto independent nation with its own military, constitution, and democratically elected government.
China’s state-run media said the drills would focus on sealing off Taiwan’s largest port city of Kaohsiung in the south and the deep-water Port of Keelung in the north.
Taiwan
Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense held a press conference late Monday afternoon on China’s military drills. It said that by 3 p.m. local time, it had detected near Taiwan 89 Chinese military aircraft, including drones, along with 28 warships and coast guard vessels, as well as a Chinese amphibious assault formation consisting of four ships.The Lai administration condemned the drills.
Presidential Office spokesperson Karen Kuo called on Beijing to immediately halt what she described as “irresponsible provocations” and refrain from becoming a “troublemaker that undermines regional peace,” according to a statement.
“China’s actions not only violently undermine the security and stability of the Taiwan Strait and the Indo-Pacific region, but also constitute a blatant challenge to international law and the international order,” Kuo added.
“We condemn the CCP’s threat to regional & global peace, stability & prosperity & will meet it with preparedness, alongside our democratic partners,” the foreign ministry said.
Taiwan’s Coast Guard Administration announced that it had dispatched large vessels after detecting four Chinese coast guard ships operating in the island’s northern and eastern waters, according to a statement issued on Monday.
Some members of Congress have welcomed the massive U.S. arms sale to Taiwan.


