Taiwan holds drills, says China seeks control of seas

China says its drills were prompted by the visit to the island last week by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, but Joseph Wu said China was using her visit as a pretext

August 09, 2022 01:00 pm | Updated 01:00 pm IST - Pingtung

A UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter flies over during a military exercise at the Hengchun airport in Pingtung county in southern Taiwan on August 9.

A UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter flies over during a military exercise at the Hengchun airport in Pingtung county in southern Taiwan on August 9. | Photo Credit: Reuters

Taiwan's Foreign Minister said on Tuesday that China aims to control the East and South China Seas via the Taiwan Strait, describing a greater ambition to upend the Asia-Pacific status quo and prevent nations from aiding the self-governing island.

Foreign Minister Joseph Wu spoke at a news conference in Taipei as Taiwan began live-fire military drills to test combat readiness in response to ongoing Chinese exercises that have included launching missiles into waters off the island of 23 million people.

China says its drills were prompted by the visit to the island last week by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, but Mr. Wu said China was using her visit as a pretext. China also banned some Taiwanese food imports after the visit and cut off dialogue with the U.S. on several issues including climate change.

Mr. Wu said China aims to upend the status quo and annex Taiwan, the self-governing island republic it claims as its own territory.

Also Read | China targets Taiwan with military, economic measures after Pelosi visit

The drills are a rehearsal for an invasion of the island in which it seeks to prevent other countries coming to the island's assistance, Mr. Wu said.

The exercises also show China's “geostrategic ambition beyond Taiwan,” Mr. Wu said.

“China has no right to interfere in or alter” the Taiwanese people's democratic process or interaction with other nations, Mr. Wu said.

Also Read | Cooling the temperatures: On U.S.-China relations after Pelosi’s Taiwan visit

Taiwan and the mainland are separate jurisdictions with “neither subordinate to the other,” Mr. Wu said.

Since Thursday, China has sent military ships and planes across the midline in the Taiwan Strait and launched missiles into waters surrounding the island. Ignoring calls to calm tensions, Beijing has extended the exercises that amount to a blockade without announcing when they will end.

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