Taiwan says six Chinese balloons detected near island

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The number of balloons detected is one of the highest recorded, according to an AFP tally.

The number of balloons detected on Feb 7 is one of the highest recorded, according to an AFP tally.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Taiwan detected six Chinese balloons off the island, the Defence Ministry said on Feb 7, as Beijing maintains military pressure to push its claim of sovereignty.

The six balloons were spotted in the 24 hours up to 6am, the ministry said, in its daily tally of Chinese military activity around the island.

Along with the balloons, nine Chinese military aircraft, six warships and two official ships were detected over the same period near Taiwan.

The balloons were spotted at an altitude of around 4,870m to 6,100m, and one of them directly flew over the island, according to an illustration released by the Defence Ministry.

While Taiwan calls itself a sovereign nation, China claims the island as part of its territory and has threatened to use force to bring it under its control.

In recent years, China has

ramped up the deployment

of fighter jets and warships around the island and sought to erase Taiwan from the international stage by poaching its diplomatic allies and blocking it from global forums.

Chinese balloons are

regularly spotted

over the waters near Taiwan, but Feb 7’s figure is one of the highest recorded, according to an AFP tally of the military data.

In 2024, Taiwan detected a record eight Chinese balloons less than a month after the presidential election won by the ruling Democratic Progressive Party’s Mr Lai Ching-te.

Beijing regards Mr Lai as a “separatist” and has staged several rounds of major military exercises since he came to power last May.

Taiwan has described the Chinese balloons as a form of “grey zone” harassment – a tactic that falls short of an act of war but can exhaust Taipei’s armed forces.

Balloons from China became a politically fraught topic in early 2023 when the US shot down what it called a spy balloon.

The huge balloon, which carried a large payload of electronics, flew over sensitive US military installations and prompted concerns that Beijing was scooping up vital intelligence.

Beijing has said it was a civilian airship blown off-course.

While the US is legally bound to provide arms to Taiwan, Washington has long maintained “strategic ambiguity” when it comes to deploying its military to defend the island from a Chinese attack.

However, US President Donald Trump’s transactional style of diplomacy has raised concerns about his willingness to defend the island.

US-Taiwan relations warmed during Mr Trump’s first term as he feuded with China on issues like trade and national security.

But Mr Trump rattled nerves during his election campaign by suggesting

Taiwan should pay the US for protection

and accusing the island of stealing the US chip industry.

While Taipei has increased spending on its military in recent years, the island of 23 million people still relies heavily on US arms sales as a deterrence against Beijing.

Mr Lai has sought to get onside with the US administration and show the island’s commitment to investing more in its own defence.

But his government’s plan to increase defence spending to a record NT$647 billion (S$26.7 billion) in 2025 appears to have been scuttled.

The opposition-controlled Parliament in January

approved deep cuts to the national budget

, including defence. AFP

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