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US PRC ROC | REPORTS

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From the NY Post:
Here’s how China would invade Taiwan, according to the Pentagon
WASHINGTON – Should China choose to launch a potential World War III by invading Taiwan, it would face an uphill battle before even setting foot on the island roughly 100 miles away from its southeastern coast, a US Army general explained Tuesday.

Speaking before the House Armed Services Committee, Maj. Gen. Joseph McGee laid out the complicated factors deterring Beijing from taking such an explosive action – which would draw the US into military conflict.

“I think it’s important to highlight [how] difficult this invasion would be if the Chinese made the decision to take such a course of action,” said McGee, who serves as the Joint Staff’s vice director for strategy, plans and policy.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has made his top goal securing the “reunification” of China and Taiwan, which Beijing considers a breakaway province despite its long history of self-governance.

Taiwan, however, considers itself its own sovereign nation with a democratically elected government.

If Xi chooses to take the island by force, the American military would be obligated to defend Taipei under the Taiwan Relations Act, which committed the US to come to the independently governed island’s defense should China attempt to disrupt the status quo.
More discussion within the article.
 
From Reuters:
Taiwan says Chinese movements 'abnormal', flags amphibious drills
By Ben Blanchard and Yimou Lee

TAIPEI (Reuters) - Recent Chinese military movements around Taiwan were "abnormal", the island's defence minister said on Friday, flagging amphibious exercises in addition to drills Taipei has observed in the province facing the island.

Taiwan has reported an increase in such activity during the past week, as dozens of fighters, drones, bombers and other aircraft, as well as warships, have operated nearby.

China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has in recent years carried out many such drills around the island, seeking to assert its sovereignty claims and pressure Taipei.

"Our initial analysis is that they are doing joint drills in September, including land, sea, air and amphibious," Defence Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng told reporters at parliament.

The "recent enemy situation is quite abnormal", he added.

The comments came after an unusual statement from the defence ministry on Thursday that it was keeping watch on Chinese activities near Dacheng Bay in the southern province of Fujian, facing Taiwan.

This is an area where Taiwan security sources say China performs landing drills.

China has not said anything about the drills around Taiwan, and its defence ministry did not respond to two requests for comment.

Chiu said releasing the information about Dacheng Bay was in line with his ministry's principle of keeping the public informed.

China carried out landing drills in Dacheng Bay in September last year and the year before that, said Chieh Chung, a military researcher at Taiwan's National Policy Foundation think tank.

Those exercises featured civilian ships with equipment practising "dockless unloading", to simulate a situation in which they might need to land after port facilities are knocked out of action or destroyed, Chieh said.

However, China would be hard pressed to carry out a frontal, amphibious invasion of the island, given geographic difficulties, a senior U.S. defence official told Congress on Tuesday.

Last week China also dispatched more than 100 military ships for regional exercises in areas such as strategic waters in the South China Sea and off Taiwan's northeast coast, a regional security official told Reuters on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

China traditionally performs large-scale exercises from July to September, Taiwan's defence ministry has said.

Earlier on Friday, the ministry said it had detected 24 Chinese military aircraft entering Taiwan's air defence identification zone during the previous 24 hours, with at least 17 crossing the median line of the Taiwan Strait, according to a map it published.

The median line used to serve as an unofficial barrier between the two sides until China's air force began regularly crossing it last year.

A second security source told Reuters, also on condition of anonymity, that China was most likely seeking to wear out Taiwan's much smaller military with constant missions so close to Taiwan, especially with longer flights along the median line than before.

"China is seeking to normalise these activities and push Taiwan into a corner," the source said, adding this risked miscalculation if Chinese ships or aircraft got too close and Taiwan opened fire.

Taiwan has frequently said that it would remain calm and not escalate the situation, but that it won't allow "repeated provocations" from China, whose forces have so far not entered Taiwan's territorial seas or airspace.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Yimou Lee; Editing by Tom Hogue, Clarence Fernandez and Gerry Doyle)
 
A private German jet operated by FAI (charter services for rich clients) flew to Moscow this morning, and returned to Germany immediately thereafter as an exception to the general ban on such flights.

German authorities are quoted as saying that "two German citizens required medical attention".

(Note: many prominent members of Putin's clique purchased German citizenship in the run-up to the war.)

Source

Edit: sorry, posted in wrong thread. Please move.
 
The video may seem too simple, too understated to mark a serious international incident in the South China Sea: a quick clip of a diver using a knife to cut a section of rope underwater.

But that diver was with the Philippine Coast Guard, and the rope was part of a sea barrier placed by Chinese forces to keep Philippine boats away from an area they had a legal right to fish in. In that moment, the Philippines took one of the most forceful steps yet in contesting China’s unrelenting territorial claims ever closer to the Philippine Islands.
 
BREAKING: Citing the "escalating threats in the West Philippine Sea (WPS)", ranking members of the House of Representatives have made a "collective decision" to reallocate confidential and intelligence funds (CIFs) that were originally earmarked for department and agencies not directly related to protecting the country’s safety and security.

 

China has said its recent military activity around the self-ruled island of Taiwan was intended to “combat the arrogance” of alleged separatists.
Beijing claims the democratic island, which lies about 160 kilometres (100 miles) from China’s eastern coast, as its own and has not ruled out the use of force to achieve its goals. It claims President Tsai Ing-wen and her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) are “separatists” and has sought to isolate the island internationally since she was first elected in 2016, mounting large-scale drills after her meetings with prominent United States politicians Nancy Pelosi and Kevin McCarthy.
On Wednesday, Taiwan’s defence ministry reported more Chinese military activity, saying that in the previous 24 hours, it had detected and responded to 16 Chinese aircraft entering the island’s air defence identification zone
 
Taiwan is bracing for Chinese cyberattacks, White House official says:
Taiwan’s political and military leadership are all hands on deck in anticipation of a cyberwar with Beijing— and Washington is ready to back their networks up, a senior White House official said at the POLITICO Tech Summit on Wednesday.

“From President Tsai [Ing-wen] on down, they’re very focused on increasing the cybersecurity and digital resilience of Taiwan,” said Anne Neuberger, the deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technologies.
 
Minister Wu honored @GrahamPerrettMP with the Friendship Medal of Diplomacy for advancing #Taiwan🇹🇼-#Australia🇦🇺 ties. At the banquet welcoming lawmakers from @AuSenate & @AboutTheHouse, he expressed eagerness to further collaborate with Canberra for regional peace & prosperity.
-Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs
 

China issues warning for military exercises in parts of South China Sea

Notice to shipping comes amid rising tension between Beijing and Manila over disputed Scarborough Shoal.
Chinese authorities have issued a navigation warning over planned military exercises in some parts of the South China Sea. The Guangdong Maritime Safety Administration said the warning would be in place from 6am (22:00 GMT to 11:30am (03:30 GMT) and from 6pm (10:00 GMT) to 9:30pm (13:30 GMT) on September 28.
“Military exercises will be conducted in some waters of the South China Sea and navigation is prohibited,” state broadcaster CCTV reported. It did not elaborate on the location of the exercises. China claims almost the entire South China Sea under its controversial nine-dash line.
 
Taiwan Launches First Domestically Built Submarine:
force, with the launch of the country’s first domestically-made submarine. The advanced diesel-electric design is part of a program that seeks to eventually field eight new boats for a much-needed overhaul of Taiwan’s aging submarine force, one that will still be vastly outnumbered by China’s fast-growing underwater armada.
 
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