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US Forces Reactivate Military Bases in Taiwan after China Warplanes Crossed Taiwan Strait

Peiweh

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Taiwan says it has spent almost US$900 million scrambling against China this year
A soldier walks past an Indigenous Defence Fighter jet and missiles at Makung Air Force Base in Taiwan's offshore island of Penghu, Sep 22, 2020. (File photo: REUTERS/Yimou Lee)
07 Oct 2020 03:47PM
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TAIPEI: Taiwan has spent almost US$900 million this year on scrambling its air force against Chinese incursions, the island's defence minister said on Wednesday (Oct 7), describing the pressure they are facing as "great".
China, which claims democratic Taiwan as its own territory, has stepped up its military activity near the island, responding to what China calls "collusion" between Taiwan and the United States.
China has been angered at increased US support for Taiwan, including visits by senior US government officials and ramped-up arms sales.
READ: Pompeo slams China's 'corruption, coercion' at Tokyo talks
In the past few weeks, Chinese fighter jets have crossed the mid line of the Taiwan Strait, which normally serves as an unofficial buffer zone, and flown multiple missions into Taiwan's southwestern air defence identification zone.
Speaking at parliament, Taiwan Defence Minister Yen De-fa said the air force had scrambled 2,972 times against Chinese aircraft this year at a cost of NT$25.5 billion (US$886.49 million).
"Recently the pressure has been great. To say otherwise would be deceiving people," Yen said, without giving a comparison figure for last year.

you watch and see - America will come to Taiwan's aid.

China_wants_war.jpg
 

Hypocrite-The

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US warns China against Taiwan attack, stresses US 'ambiguity'
FILE PHOTO: A Republic of China Air Force (ROCAF) F-16V fighter jet lands on a highway used as an emergency runway during the Han Kuang military exercise simulating the China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) invading the island, in Changhua, Taiwan on May 28, 2019. (Photo: REUTERS/Tyrone Siu)
08 Oct 2020 09:05AM
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WASHINGTON: The US national security adviser warned China on Wednesday (Oct 7) against any attempt to retake Taiwan by force, saying amphibious landings were notoriously difficult and there was a lot of ambiguity about how the United States would respond.
Robert O'Brien told an event at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas that China was engaged in a massive naval buildup probably not seen since Germany's attempt to compete with Britain's Royal Navy prior to World War One.

"Part of that is to give them the ability to push us back out of the Western Pacific, and allow them to engage in an amphibious landing in Taiwan," he said.
READ: US says Taiwan military budget boost insufficient for 'resilient defence'
READ: Tsai defiant as Taiwan's anti-China jet flights double


"The problem with that is that amphibious landings are notoriously difficult," O'Brien added, pointing to the 160km distance between China and Taiwan and the paucity of landing beaches on the island.

"It's not an easy task, and there's also a lot of ambiguity about what the United States would do in response to an attack by China on Taiwan," he added, when asked what US options would be if China moved to try to absorb Taiwan.
O'Brien was referring to a long-standing US policy of "strategic ambiguity" on the question of whether it would intervene to protect Taiwan, which China considers a its province and has vowed to reunite with the mainland, by force if necessary.
READ: Taiwan defence chief says no signs China is preparing for war

READ: Beijing says support for Taiwan independence 'doomed to fail'


The United States is required by law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself, but it has not made clear whether it would intervene militarily in the event of a Chinese attack, something that would likely lead to a much broader conflict with Beijing.
O'Brien's comments come at a time when China has significantly stepped up military activity near Taiwan and when US-China relations have plunged to the lowest point in decades in the run-up to President Donald Trump's Nov 3 re-election bid.
O'Brien repeated US calls for Taiwan to spend more on its own defense and to carry out military reforms to make clear to China the risks of attempting to invade.
"You can't just spend 1 per cent of your GDP, which the Taiwanese have been doing - 1.2 per cent - on defense, and hope to deter a China that's been engaged in the most massive military build up in 70 years," he said.
Taiwan needed to "turn themselves into a porcupine" militarily, he said, adding: "Lions generally don't like to eat porcupines."
On Tuesday, the senior US defense official for East Asia called Taiwan's plan to boost defense spending by US$1.4 billion next year insufficient.
He said it needed to invest in capabilities including more coastal defense cruise missiles, naval mines, fast-attack craft, mobile artillery and advanced surveillance assets.
Source: Reuters/ic
 
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