China this Friday accused the new Taiwanese president, Lai Ching-te, of pushing the autonomous island towards “war” and threatened to reinforce his “countermeasures”, on the second day of major military maneuvers around Taiwan.
“Since taking office (Monday), the leader of the Taiwan region has seriously questioned the one-China principle (…), which is pushing our compatriots in Taiwan into a dangerous war situation”Declared Wu Qian, spokesperson for the Ministry of Defense, in a statement.
“This is called playing with fire, and those who play with fire will surely get burned.”he added.
“Every time (the movement supporting) ‘Taiwan independence’ provokes us, we will go one step further with our countermeasures, until we achieve complete reunification of the motherland.“warned the spokesperson.
The Chinese army began two days of military exercises on Thursday around Taiwan, which on Monday celebrated the inauguration as president of Lai Ching-te, considered by Beijing as a “dangerous separatist”.
Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said that “since 07:14 today (23:14 GMT on Thursday), 62 planes were detected (…) 47 of which crossed the median line“, in reference to the line that divides the Taiwan Strait, located between the island and mainland China.
This is the highest number of aircraft observed in 24 hours this year. The ministry also counted 27 Chinese navy and coast guard vessels mobilized for these exercises.
The device is part of a campaign to escalate China’s military pressure on this island with a democratic regime, with almost daily incursions by ships and planes in its surroundings and several large-scale exercises since 2022.
Its objective is to verify “the ability to seize power, jointly attack and control key territories“Chinese military spokesman Li Xi noted on Friday.
“Inevitable” unification
On Pingtan, a Chinese island located in the Taiwan Strait, tourists posed on Friday in front of a sign that read “The closest distance between the motherland and the island of Taiwan”, of 126 km.
“We share common roots“Chen Yan, a 60-year-old woman from Wuhan, central China, told AFP. “So I think it is inevitable that there will be a unification.”
Images released by the Chinese army show soldiers leaving a building to take up their combat positions and military planes taking off to the sound of martial music.
State broadcaster CCTV reported that Chinese sailors contacted their Taiwanese counterparts on the high seas and warned them not to “resist reunification by force”.
And an animated graphic published by the Chinese military recreates a barrage of missiles against key targets in the north, south and east of the island, ensuring that they will “cut the blood vessels of Taiwan independence”.
The Taiwan Coast Guard reported that four Chinese coast guard vessels had accessed “restricted waters” in their territory, and urged Beijing to “Immediately stop your irrational behavior”.
The United Nations on Thursday called on all parties to avoid an escalation and the United States, Taipei’s main ally and weapons supplier, urged “firmly“to China to act”with moderation”.
China and Taiwan have been governed separately since the end of the civil war in 1949, but Beijing claims sovereignty over the island and does not rule out the use of force to take control.
The territory barely has official diplomatic relations with 12 countries in the world, but it has a government, army and its own currency and plays a crucial role in the world economy as the main producer of semiconductors.
“Serious warning”
Already before Lai’s victory in the January presidential elections, China had warned that if he was elected, it would take “war and decline” to the island.
In an inauguration speech that infuriated Beijing, Lai celebrated an era “glorious” for Taiwan democracy and urged China to “cease their political and military intimidation.”
On Friday, the Xinhua news agency and the Communist Party’s People’s Daily published editorials praising the maneuvers, lashing out at the “treacherous behavior“Lai and promising”a hard knock”.
The day before, the spokesperson for Chinese diplomacy, Wang Wenbin, assured that the maneuvers are a “serious warning” addressed to the “independentists“of the island, which will end”bloody”.
The exercises take place in the Taiwan Strait and in the north, south and east of the territory, as well as on the Taipei-administered islands of Kinmen, Matsu, Wuqiu and Dongyin.
Source: Gestion

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