China fires rockets off Taiwan’s coast during massive military drill

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TINGSHU WANG / REUTERS

A giant screen in Beijing today shows a news report on China’s “Justice Mission 2025” military drills around Taiwan.

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TSAI HSIN-HAN / REUTERS

Hsieh Jih-sheng, deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence at Taiwan’s defense ministry, points at a map during a news conference today in Taipei about China’s military drills around Taiwan.

TAIPEI/BEIJING >> China fired ‌rockets into waters off Taiwan today, showcased new assault ships and dismissed prospects of U.S. and allied intervention to block any ‌future attack by Beijing to take control of the island in its most extensive war games to date.

As part of drills rehearsing a blockade, China’s Eastern Theatre Command conducted 10 hours of live-fire exercises, launching rockets into waters to the north and south of the democratically governed island.

Chinese naval and air force units also simulated strikes on maritime and aerial targets and carried out anti-submarine drills around the island, while state media released images touting Beijing’s technological and military superiority and its ability to take Taiwan by force if necessary. Named “Justice Mission 2025,” the drills began 11 days ‍after the U.S. announced a record $11.1 billion arms package to Taiwan, drawing the Chinese defense ministry’s ire and warnings that the military would “take forceful measures” in response.

President Donald Trump, who said on Monday he has a “great relationship” with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, has downplayed the threat of the drills, though U.S. lawmakers and the European Union condemned Beijing’s actions as undermining regional peace and stability.

For the first time, China’s military said the drills were aimed at deterring outside intervention.

“Any external forces that attempt to intervene in the Taiwan issue or interfere in China’s internal affairs ​will surely smash their heads bloody against the iron walls of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army,” China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said in a statement on ​Monday.

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Beijing has also intensified its rhetoric over Taiwan in the weeks since Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested a hypothetical attack on the island could trigger a military response from Tokyo.

Xi last week promoted the commander of the Eastern Theatre Command, which oversees Taiwan-facing operations, to full general – a move which analysts say serves to shore up the military’s combat readiness after a leadership purge.

“China not only has vast numerical superiority, it now has qualitative superiority across the board in weaponry and probably in training ‍as well,” said Lyle Goldstein, Asia program director at U.S.-based think tank Defense Priorities.

“This is an arms race Taiwan cannot possibly win.”

Trump on Monday said he was not worried about the drills, adding ​that China has carried out naval exercises around Taiwan for more than 20 years.

In contrast, John Moolenaar, the Republican ⁠chair of the U.S. House of Representatives’ select committee on China, said China’s actions represented a “deliberate escalation.”

“By rehearsing coercive military scenarios and projecting force beyond its borders, the Chinese Communist Party is seeking to reshape the regional order through aggression and intimidation,” Moolenaar said in a statement today. Washington would work to “preserve Taiwan’s security,” he added.

The European Union also said it had a “direct interest in the preservation of the status quo in the Taiwan Strait,” adding in a statement that Beijing “endangers international peace and stability” with ⁠its latest exercises.

While Trump has repeatedly said Xi told him he will not attack Taiwan while the U.S. president is in office — something Beijing has never confirmed — Trump’s first and second administrations have a track record of ramping up weapon sales approvals to Taiwan compared with other U.S. administrations.

The drills this week, the sixth major round of war games since 2022, were the largest by area and the closest yet to Taiwan.

Hsieh Jih-sheng, deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence at Taiwan’s Defense Ministry, told reporters China had ramped up its drills around the island over the past three years to make people doubt the government’s ability to defend them.

A senior Taiwan security official told Reuters that China appeared to be simulating striking land-based targets such as the U.S.-made HIMARS rocket system, a mobile artillery system with a range of about 186 miles that could hit coastal targets in southern China.

Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te said in a post on Facebook that frontline troops ⁠were primed to defend the island but that Taipei did not seek to escalate the situation.

China’s state media rolled a stream of propaganda posters, including one titled “Hammers of Justice” that ‍showed Lai being crushed by one hammer striking the island’s south while another hits its north.

Chinese newspapers also highlighted the first deployment of the Type 075 amphibious assault ship. Zhang Chi, an academic at China’s National Defense University, said the vessel can simultaneously launch attack helicopters, landing craft, amphibious tanks and armoured vehicles.

Taiwan sits alongside key commercial shipping and aviation routes, with some $2.45 trillion ‍in trade moving through the Taiwan Strait each year and the airspace above the island a conduit between China, the world’s second-largest economy, and the fast-growing markets of ​East and Southeast Asia.

Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Authority said that although 11 of Taipei’s 14 flight routes were affected by ‍the drills, no international flights had been cancelled. Routes to the offshore islands of Kinmen and Matsu near China’s coast were blocked, affecting around 6,000 passengers.

Taiwan’s defense ministry said 71 Chinese military aircraft and 24 navy and coast guard vessels had been operating around the island today. The ministry added that China fired 27 rockets in Taiwan’s waters. Chinese coast guard ships were tracking Taiwanese vessels during the drills, a Taiwan coast guard official told Reuters.

A Pentagon report released last week said the U.S. military believed China was preparing to be able to win a fight for Taiwan by 2027, the centenary of the founding of the PLA.

China’s military said on Monday that simulating a blockade of Taiwan’s deep-water Port of Keelung to the island’s north and Kaohsiung to ​Taiwan’s south, its largest port city, was central to the drills.

The Pentagon report said U.S. military planners believed Beijing was also contemplating carrying out strikes from China to take Taiwan by “brute force” if needed.

See more:World news

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