Taiwan drills to whip up China fears
Taiwan carried out military drills Wednesday with naval chiefs assuring residents the island is safe, as concerns grow that tensions will escalate with China after recent presidential elections.
Taiwan carried out military drills Wednesday with naval chiefs assuring residents the island is safe, as concerns grow that tensions will escalate with China after recent presidential elections.
The drills were the first since Tsai Ing-wen of the China-sceptic Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) swept to victory in the elections earlier this month.
She ousted the ruling Beijing-friendly Kuomintang (KMT), bringing to an end eight years of unprecedented rapprochement with China.
On Wednesday, the Taiwanese Navy displayed eight warships and fired flares from a missile corvette during an exercise in waters off Tsoying in southern Taiwan, home to the island’s naval headquarters.
It was the second and final day of the drills which saw a group of elite frogmen land on a beach in motorboats Tuesday on the island of Kinmen — a Taiwan-controlled outpost island near China’s southeastern Xiamen city.
A fleet of F-16 fighter jets were also scrambled in another exercise Tuesday at the southern Chiayi airbase.
“With the Lunar New Year approaching, our citizens can feel at ease we are able to maintain peace in the Taiwan Strait,” Vice Admiral Tsai Hung-tu, head of the Navy’s political warfare office, said.
