China holds military drills around Taiwan as warning to ‘separatist forces’

Taiwan’s presidential office has criticised the upcoming Chinese drills, calling them a challenge to international norms.
Taiwan’s defence ministry said that they detected Chinese aircraft and ships around Taiwan on Monday morning, and have deployed their own forces and missile systems to monitor the situation. Its forces are on “high alert” to defend Taiwan and “protect our people”, the ministry said.
In a post on Weibo, the Chinese military’s Eastern Theater Command – in charge of the Taiwan Strait – described the upcoming military exercise as a “shield of justice”.
“All those plotting independence will be annihilated upon encountering the shield!” the post read.
While some initial drills have begun, the military said it would conduct a major exercise from 08:00 to 18:00 local time on Tuesday.
While China has long called for the “peaceful reunification” with Taiwan, it also has a law stating it will resort to “non-peaceful means” to prevent the island’s “secession”.
Beijing has accused Taiwan’s president Lai Ching-te of pursuing “Taiwan independence”. The president maintains Taiwan is already a sovereign nation and therefore has no need to formally declare independence.
On Sunday, Lai said in a local television interview that Taiwan needed to “keep raising the difficulty so [China] can never meet the standard” for an invasion.
He also said that his administration was committed to “maintaining the status quo” and would not provoke China – though he added that peace relies on “real strength”.
Polls consistently show that most Taiwanese people want the “status quo”, meaning they neither want to unify with China, nor to formally declare independence.




