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An H-6K aircraft takes part in training exercises in the South China Sea in November 2017. Four of the bombers were reportedly part of a group of Chinese planes that entered Taiwan’s air defence identification zone on Friday. Photo: Xinhua

Taiwan reports largest ever incursion by Chinese air force

  • 20 warplanes entered Taiwan’s air defence identification zone soon after the island sealed a new coastguard deal with the US
  • Taiwan’s air force has deployed missiles to ‘monitor’ the incursion, its defence ministry said.
Taiwan

Twenty Chinese military aircraft entered Taiwan’s air defence identification zone on Friday, in the largest incursion yet reported by the island’s defence ministry.

The move marked a dramatic escalation of tension across the Taiwan Strait, and came soon after the US and Taiwan signed a memorandum of understanding to boost cooperation between their coastguards.

The island’s defence ministry said the air force deployed missiles to “monitor” the incursion into the southwestern part of its air defence identification zone. It also said its planes warned the Chinese aircraft, including by radio.

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It marked the largest incursion to date by the Chinese air force since Taiwan’s defence ministry began disclosing almost daily Chinese military flights over the waters between the southern part of Taiwan and the Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands in the South China Sea last year.

Some of the Chinese aircraft flew in the airspace to the south of Taiwan and passed through the Bashi Channel which separates the island from the Philippines, Taiwan’s defence ministry said in a statement.

A person familiar with Taiwan’s security planning said the Chinese military was conducting exercises that would simulate an operation against US warships that sail through the Bashi Channel.

China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory, has stepped up military activities near the democratic island in recent months, a move Taiwan says jeopardises regional stability.

The presence of so many Chinese combat aircraft on Friday’s mission – Taiwan said it was made up of four nuclear-capable H-6K bombers and 10 J-16 fighter planes, among others – was unusual and came as the island’s air force suspended all training missions after two fighter crashes this week.

Taipei, Washington seal coastguard deal ‘to counter Beijing’s grey zone threats’

There was no immediate comment from China’s defence ministry. Beijing routinely says such exercises are nothing unusual and are designed to show the country’s determination to defend its sovereignty.

Earlier on Friday, Taiwan and the United States signed their first agreement under the administration of new president Joe Biden, establishing a Coast Guard Working Group to coordinate policy, after China’s passing of a law that allows its coastguard to fire on foreign vessels.

While the United States, like most countries, has no formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan, it is bound by law to help Taiwan defend itself and is the island’s main arms supplier.

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