No imminent threat of China invading Taiwan, says senior US official

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US Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall said the US is ready to defend Taiwan.

US Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said the United States is ready to defend Taiwan.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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SINGAPORE – The United States does not see an imminent threat of China invading Taiwan but is ready to defend the island, a senior US official said on Thursday in Singapore.

Tensions have simmered between the two major powers as China becomes more assertive in its territorial claims over Taiwan and in the South China Sea, while the US shores up alliances across the Asia-Pacific region to counter Beijing’s influence.

“I don’t certainly see any imminent threat. Hopefully that is something that would never materialise,” US Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said on the sidelines of the Singapore Defence Technology Summit.

“Anyone who contemplates an act of aggression that would involve the United States is making a very serious mistake,” he said.

Beijing reacted with fury in 2022 when

former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan,

launching live-fire military drills around the island.

China sees Taiwan as a breakaway province awaiting reunification, by force if necessary. Taiwan rejects China’s sovereignty claims.

Mr Kendall said China has done “a number of things that are fairly aggressive”, including “militarising” the South China Sea, the strategic trade corridor in which several countries and territories have overlapping claims.

China claims most of the waterway as its territory and has said that the US is the biggest driver of militarisation in the region.

The Chinese military said on Thursday that it monitored and drove away a US destroyer that had illegally entered waters around the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea. The US Navy said China’s statement was inaccurate.

Mr Kendall also pointed to the presence of

a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon in US airspace

in February as an “act of aggression”, but said it was “not a serious military threat” and was unlikely to happen again.

Beijing

denied the balloon was a government spy craft.

Mr Kendall called on the two countries to work together, saying that “we should be working to increase our cooperation, not decreasing (it)“. REUTERS

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