By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Election Of William Lai
During the January
13, 2024, Taiwan’s citizens elected William Lai of the ruling Democratic
Progressive Party (DPP). Dialogue with President Xi,
which China cut was following DPP's President Tsai
Ing-wen’s inauguration.
The Democratic
Progressive Party (DPP) is a center to center-left
Taiwanese nationalist political party in Taiwan, officially the Republic of
China (ROC). It is currently the major ruling party in Taiwan.
As reported before,
China has embarked on a series of island reclamations in the South China Sea and turned them into garrisons, ignoring earlier
formal guarantees that it would not. Under Xi, the country has carried out
large-scale, live-fire missile strikes around the Taiwanese coast, simulating a
maritime and air blockade of the island—something that previous Chinese regimes refrained from doing despite
having the ability to do so.
The US feels forced to
contemplate a possibility that many have regarded as almost unthinkable since the Cold War: a major
military conflict with another great power. For the first time in
decades, Moscow has been
rattling its missiles to warn Washington about its support for
Ukraine. And in early August, following U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, Beijing
dramatically escalated its threat of military action over the island.
Almost as startling as the threats themselves are what
they seem to suggest about the limits
of economic interdependence as a force for peace. Both China and Russia rely to an
extraordinary degree on trade for economic growth and to secure their positions
on the world stage.
Why The Taiwan Issue Is So Complex And Can China Simple Take It?
China’s gray-zone
activities in the Taiwan Strait should not be viewed as a mere prelude to
an amphibious invasion.
Rather, Beijing’s persistent use of similar tactics in nearby waters suggests
such actions are the primary methods in a patient, long-term strategy aimed at
subjugating Taiwan without resorting to an invasion.
The drills are seen
as a response to a speech by Taiwanese President William Lai last week, in which he vowed to resist
"annexation" by Beijing.
Since 2022 the tempo of Chinese
operations has remained high, with daily incursions across the median line
going up and down depending on what signals China wants to send – to its
people, to Taiwan, and to Taiwan’s allies. And since Lai Ching-Te’s election in January, the tempo of operations has
increased again – quite dramatically.
In May 2024,
after President Lai’s
inauguration, Also large-scale drills were announced – called Joint Sword
2024A – they were described by China as its largest so far, combined operations
of air and sea and missile forces, which “surrounded” Taiwan from all sides –
simulating a blockade.
Today we are seeing
the long-expected Joint Sword 2024B – which China is describing as again
surrounding Taiwan with combined operations practicing to fight in "all
weather conditions". It is very good weather in and around Taiwan this
week, so that claim seems more rhetorical than real.
Among the flood of
commentaries and remarks from the Chinese side, today is an analysis of
something different about the drills this time: the starting hour.
The drills started
before dawn today, Beijing says. And the reason, according to one Chinese
military expert, is to show more teeth.
In a video released
by CCTV-affiliated social media account Yuyuan Tantian,
Fu Zhengnan of the PLA Academy of Military
Science said a new notable feature of today's drills is its focus on simulating
"all-weather" conditions, which makes the "atmosphere of real
combat even stronger".
The operations
were launched before dawn and during nighttime, and the forces were
ready to shift from training to combat "at any moment", he said.
Since
2022 the tempo of Chinese operations has remained high, with daily
incursions across the median line going up and down depending on what signals
China wants to send – to its people, to Taiwan, and to Taiwan’s allies. And
since Lai Ching-Te’s election in January, the
tempo of operations has increased again – quite dramatically.
In May 2024, after
President Lai’s inauguration, further large-scale drills were announced – Joint
Sword 2024A – they were described by China as its largest so far, combined
operations of air and sea and missile forces, which “surrounded” Taiwan from
all sides – simulating a blockade.
Today we are seeing
the long-expected Joint Sword 2024B – which China is describing as again
surrounding Taiwan with combined operations practicing to fight in "all
weather conditions". It is very good weather in and around Taiwan this
week, so that claim seems more rhetorical than real.
The Taiwanese defense
ministry has released footage of its military responding to the Chinese drills.
It shows air defense
launchers, military vehicles, and a naval vessel being maneuvered into
position.
Earlier, the ministry
said the Taiwanese military would monitor Chinese threats but avoid any
escalation or direct clashes.
With today's
exercise, China is sending a message to Taiwanese President William Lai that
moves towards "Taiwan independence" are bound to meet a "dead
end", an analyst told Chinese state media.
The drills aim to
have a "more intense deterrent effect" on what China considers as
"separatist forces", Professor Zhang Chi from China PLA
National Defence University tells CCTV.
"The more the
separatist forces dare to provoke, the further the PLA will advance. The closer
the separatists align with external forces, the tighter the chain of Taiwan's
blockade will become," he says.
China is also ramping
up its production of drones, which it has used in exercises around Taiwan. China North Industries
Group, or Norinco, recently unveiled a new
kamikaze drone with a range of 124 miles and a cruising speed of 90 miles per
hour.
Taiwan's Ministry of
Defense has condemned what it describes as "irrational and provocative
behavior" by China, adding it is ready to defend itself.
Taiwan's transport
ministry says air traffic and port operations remain "normal" despite
the military drills off the coast.
Taiwan's ally, the
US, says it is monitoring the drills.
China is a
springboard hear many tell it, the future of the United States’
security—and, indeed, the world’s—rides on
Taiwan. A self-governing Taiwan
anchors Japan’s defense and denies China a springboard from which it could
threaten U.S. allies in the western Pacific. On the topic of Taiwan,
contemporary analysts often invoke General Douglas MacArthur’s description of
the island as “an unsinkable aircraft carrier” and “submarine tender.”
Beijing also mounted
drills around Taiwan after Lai was sworn in as president earlier this year.
Taiwan's President
William Lai has released a new statement saying the country's military and
coast guard are "holding their positions" at sea and in the air amid
ongoing Chinese military exercises.
He says the Chinese drills are "intended to
disrupt regional peace and stability" and constitute an attempt to coerce
China's regional neighbours by using force.
The statement goes on
to say the government will protect Taiwan's democratic system and national
security "in the face of external threats".
His office had earlier this
morning said China
should "refrain from military provocations".
The Chinese military
says it launched this round of exercises in response to remarks made by Lai in
a speech a few days ago, in which he vowed to resist any efforts to exert
control over Taiwan.
"Scared"
and "desensitized" - here's how people on the streets of Taipei are
talking about China's fresh wave of military exercises around the self-ruled
island.
These Military Drills By China’s People’s Liberation
Army (PLA) Are All About Intimidation.
Beijing has long
vowed to "reunify" Taiwan with the mainland, by force if necessary,
and to do so well before the centenary of the founding of the Chinese Communist
Party (CCP) in 2049.
Ideally, it would
like this to happen without a shot being fired in anger and for Taipei to
voluntarily submit to its rule - but Taiwan’s population has watched aghast at
the recent suppression of democracy across the water in Hong Kong, and most
people are even less keen than before on being ruled by a one-party Communist
autocracy.
Beijing’s response is
to remind Taiwan of its overwhelming strategic superiority. It has recently
embarked on a massive military build-up in all areas: hypersonic missiles,
aircraft carriers, nuclear warheads, and fifth-generation combat aircraft. The
PLA Navy is now the largest in the world and still growing.
And yet a full-scale
invasion of Taiwan would be something of a last resort for the CCP. It would be
hugely costly, both in terms of manpower and economic damage to the global
economy.
For Beijing, there is
also the big unknown factor: just how far is the US prepared to go to defend
Taiwan?
China has increased its military investment under Xi
Jinping
So far, the maneuvers have fallen short of an invasion
and stayed within a grey zone, which is military speak for tactics that fall
between war and peace.
But Taiwan is now seen as a tinderbox in what has
become a volatile US-China relationship - and analysts say grey zone tactics
are part of Beijing's strategy to control Taipei without firing a single shot.
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