TAIPEI (AFP) — Taiwan said Tuesday that China’s deployment of ships in waters around the island was bigger than its military drills in 2022, which were the largest-ever Chinese war games.
Defense ministry spokesperson Sun Li-fang said the number of Chinese warships, coast guard and other vessels along the so-called first island chain, which links Okinawa, Taiwan and the Philippines, exceeded Beijing’s maritime response to then United States House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taipei in 2022.
A senior Taiwanese security official told Agence France-Presse on Tuesday that “nearly 90” Chinese naval and coast guard ships were currently in waters of the East China Sea, Taiwan Strait and South China Sea.
Taiwan’s defense ministry said earlier it had also detected 47 Chinese aircraft and 12 warships near the island in the 24 hours to 6 a.m.
China’s air presence this week has not been as big as during the war games staged in 2022.
Pelosi’s visit sparked outrage from Beijing, which launched vast military maneuvers around the island.
Mobilizing fighter planes, helicopters and warships, the drills aimed to simulate a blockade of Taiwan and included practising an “attack on targets at sea,” state news agency Xinhua reported at the time.
It was the first time Chinese exercises had taken place so close to Taiwan, with some of the drills happening less than 20 kilometers from the island’s coast.
Also unprecedented were Beijing’s drills on Taiwan’s eastern flank, a strategically vital area for supplies to the island’s military forces — as well as any potential American reinforcements.
China also fired ballistic missiles during the exercises that were condemned by Washington as a gross overreaction to Pelosi’s visit.
Taiwan regards itself as a sovereign nation, but Beijing insists the island is part of its territory and has not ruled out using force to bring it under its control.