Taiwan warns of rise in Chinese military activity around region

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A Taiwanese military warship is seen at a harbour in Keelung on April 1, 2025. China on April 1 sent its army, navy, air and rocket forces to surround Taiwan for drills Beijing said were aimed at practising a blockade of the self-ruled island. (Photo by I-HWA CHENG / AFP)

Tensions have steadily risen since Taiwan President Lai Ching-te took office in May 2024.

PHOTO: AFP

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TAIPEI – Taiwan said China escalated military pressure around the region in May, deploying dozens of warships and government vessels daily in what it described as an extreme pressure campaign. 

China sent an average of 50 to 70 vessels per day across the first island chain – a key strategic arc stretching from Japan through Taiwan and the Philippines – between May 1 and 27, said a senior Taiwanese security official, who asked not to be identified, citing government protocol.

The official, who spoke at a briefing on May 29, called it a record high for May. No comparable figures from last year were provided.

A document shared at the briefing showed the scale and range of the deployments, stretching from the Yellow Sea to the East and South China Seas. 

Tensions have steadily risen since Taiwan President Lai Ching-te took office in May 2024.

Beijing, which views the democratic island as part of its territory, has called Mr Lai a separatist and carried out at least seven sets of military drills around the island since his inauguration, a pace not seen in previous years. 

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth on May 31 urged partners in Asia to raise defence spending toward 5 per cent of gross domestic product, warning that more urgency is needed to prepare for a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan. 

Chinese activity peaked around May 27, when more than 70 vessels – mostly naval – were observed operating in the region, according to the Taipei official.

Two aircraft carriers, the Shandong and Liaoning, took part in the activities in May, with the Liaoning conducting take-off and landing drills for warplanes in the East China Sea for the first time, the official said. 

Chinese patrols also appeared to press closer to Taiwan’s 24-nautical mile boundary during joint combat exercises, which the Taipei official said goes far beyond Beijing’s defence needs.

Separate data from Taiwan’s Defence Ministry shows around 254 Chinese warships and government vessels were spotted around the archipelago over May 1-27, averaging nine a day, according to Bloomberg calculations.

That’s slightly up from an average of seven a day in 2024, the data shows. Bloomberg

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