China holds live-fire drills in Taiwan Strait

Show of military might dismissed by Taipei as 'routine' and smaller than Chinese media hype

People's Liberation Army Navy personnel in a military display in the South China Sea earlier this month. The Chinese authorities have yet to release any details about yesterday's live-fire drills in the Taiwan Strait. PHOTO: REUTERS

BEIJING •China held live-fire drills in the Taiwan Strait yesterday, but Taipei dismissed the exercises as "routine" after expected large-scale naval manoeuvres failed to materialise.

Beijing had announced the drills last week, further ramping up tensions following stark warnings against any independence moves by the self-ruled island which China sees as its sovereign territory.

Vessels had been told to avoid a certain area off the Chinese mainland's coast, triggering speculation that a flotilla spearheaded by China's sole aircraft carrier would take part in the exercise.

But Taiwan's Defence Ministry said the drills involved only land-based artillery conducting "routine" shooting practice. Beijing has yet to release any information about the drills, which the Chinese authorities had said would run until midnight, without giving any details about which military equipment or personnel would be involved.

"China deliberately released fake information to exaggerate it, to make it sound huge when in fact it's small," Taiwan's Defence Ministry spokesman Chen Chung-chi told AFP. "It's the cheapest way of verbal intimidation and sabre-rattling," Major-General Chen said, adding that such exercises had been held every year since 2007, except for last year.

The drills coincided with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen's visit to Swaziland, one of Taipei's few remaining international allies.

China's Taiwan Affairs Office director Liu Jieyi had said on Monday that the drills were "to safeguard the sovereignty and territorial integrity of our motherland".

Relations between Beijing and Taipei have deteriorated since Ms Tsai came to office in May 2016, largely because she has not embraced the position that Taiwan and China are one country.

China sees the democratically governed island as a renegade part of its territory to be brought back into the fold and has not ruled out reunification by force.

Beijing has also been angered by Washington's arms sales to Taipei. China protested last month after US President Donald Trump signed a Bill allowing top-level US officials to travel to Taiwan.

The United States switched diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to China in 1979, but maintains trade relations with the island and is its main weapons supplier.

Ms Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party is traditionally pro-independence and her newly appointed premier William Lai is a longstanding independence advocate.

Chinese President Xi Jinping warned in a speech on March 20 that "all acts and tricks to separate the country are doomed to fail".

That same day, China's sole operational aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, sailed through the Taiwan Strait.

Beijing has stepped up military patrols around Taiwan and used diplomatic pressure to isolate the island internationally since Ms Tsai took office.

The exercises are "part of Beijing's psychological warfare against Taiwan, and possibly a means to divert attention from Ms Tsai's visit abroad by compelling media to report on the military drills", said Mr J. Michael Cole, a Taipei-based senior fellow at the University of Nottingham's China Policy Institute.

"Chinese media have played up the significance of these exercises, but in reality that will be relatively limited, and this time it's unlikely they will cross into Taiwan's side of the median line in the Taiwan Strait," he said.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on April 19, 2018, with the headline China holds live-fire drills in Taiwan Strait. Subscribe