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All you need to know about China-Taiwan War

All you need to know about China-Taiwan War

The Chinese military held military drills last week that included missile strikes, fighter jets and ship movement across the centerline of the Taiwan Strait. In response, days after the Chinese military’s large-scale military drills, the Taiwanese military also launched live artillery drills simulating defending the island from attack. , the ship is looking for an alternative route. ” Several zones in the Taiwan Strait were blocked by Chinese forces as a result, causing a decline in vessel traffic in the Taiwan Strait from about 250 per day to roughly 15-20 per day,” a Singapore-based trader told Moneycontrol. Told.

 He added that many shipping companies are cutting even short shipments scheduled for importers across Asia.  The Chinese government has launched rockets across the Taiwan Strait in protest against the visit of  US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.  China said  Pelosi’s visit violated its sovereignty because it sees Taiwan as part of its territory and promises to take control of it. 

Importance of the Taiwan Strait

 Analysts say the Taiwan Strait is a very large part of international shipping routes, with nearly half of the world’s container fleet transiting the route in 2021-2022. Ongoing military action in the Straits has forced shipping lines to turn or slow down some vessels currently en route to North Asia. As long as military action from both sides continues, deliveries to Taiwan and Japan may also be affected.

“Global supply chains are interconnected, and all major stretches like the Taiwan Strait are the hubs of these value chains. And when one stretch is blocked, an undercurrent is felt throughout the system.

 ” When the peak season arrives, the impact will be severe, especially when the industry is busy shipping cargo. The magnitude of the impact will be determined by the duration of this disruption,” said Technology for Container Logistics Companies. said Christian Roeloffs, co-founder and CEO of Container xChange, a  marketplace and operations platform.

However, most analysts do not expect continued military activity across the Taiwan Strait, as neither China nor Taiwan has closed its ports to date. “Taiwan ports are open,” Soren Skou, chief executive of Danish container shipping company AP Moller-Maersk, told The Wall Street Journal. “We just  move into exercise territory.”

 China also suspended imports of citrus fruits and fish (chilled hairtail and frozen horse mackerel) from Taiwan from August 3 and suspended exports to Taiwan of natural sand used to make semiconductor chips.

Impact on India

 Bilateral trade between India and Taiwan will exceed US$7 billion in 2021, with over 120 Taiwanese companies operating in India, with a cumulative investment of over US$2.3 billion.  India and Taiwan also have a free trade agreement (FTA) with a particular focus on India’s development as a semiconductor manufacturing hub.

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Taiwan’s biggest imports to India are semiconductors and electronics, and if military activity in the Taiwan Strait continues, Indian auto and consumer electronics makers will once again face semiconductor shortages. “Taiwan is a key player in the global supply chain, manufacturing critical semiconductors and electronics and controlling 10% of the world’s shipping container capacity,”  Goldman Sachs analysts said. 

He added that there have been no shipments of semiconductors from Taiwan to Taiwan yet. India was affected, but as geopolitical tensions between China and Taiwan continue to rise, India will face semiconductor shortages again. Taiwan’s Foreign Minister Joseph Wu claimed on August 9 that Beijing was encircling Taiwan with air and sea operations in preparation for an invasion of the Asia-Pacific region.

“China is preparing to invade Taiwan using training and military manuals,” Joseph Wu said at a press conference in Taipei. According to Chinese officials, the real goal of this new policy is to change the status quo in the Taiwan Straits and the region as a whole.”

 China’s threat to Taiwan is “more serious than ever”, but Taiwan will resolutely defend its independence and democracy, Wu said in his Aug. 8 interview with CNN. – Congressman Nancy Pelosi in  Taipei last week.

 Taiwan’s efforts to thwart Beijing’s attempts to isolate it from the international community have invited overseas friends to the island despite possible backlash from the Chinese government, Wu said. added. “(China) cannot dictate that people who are willing to come to Taiwan and support Taiwan should not be welcomed,” Wu said.

 Taiwan has been threatened by China for years and the threat has gained seriousness in recent years, Wu said. We must come to terms with the fact that the Chinese military threat to Taiwan will always exist, regardless of whether Speaker Pelosi visits Taiwan. 

 After days of intense Chinese war rehearsals, Taiwan’s military conducted a live artillery drill simulating the island’s defence against attack.  China launched its largest-ever air and naval drills around Taiwan last week in response to the visit of top US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who visited Taiwan for the first time in decades.

Taiwan faces a constant threat of aggression from China. China views its neighbours as part of its territory and believes they will one day be conquered by force if necessary.

Chinese nationalists were outraged by Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan. Communication on the US-China crisis has ended. India and China hold special talks on People’s Liberation Army air rights violations. During this week, many events took place across the  Taiwan Strait. Chinascope provides a comprehensive insight into everything that changed our world. China on weekdays

 Chinese nationalist sentiment reached new heights when the U.S. in a meeting with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi signed a joint statement. Chinese social media ridiculed Pelosi as an “old lady” and accused Taipei of lobbying to invite Pelosi. 

Angry Chinese nationalists demanded a response from the Beijing government as people on social media commented on how the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) had just shot down a plane and Pelosi was landing in Taiwan. As soon as Pelosi left Taipei, the People’s Liberation Army’s Eastern Theater Command began military exercises around Taiwan in what appeared to be mock attacks.

The hashtag “Eastern Theater has launched a series of joint military operations” has seen him 530 million times on Weibo. Several Chinese political groups and the military issued statements condemning Pelosi’s visit and “undermining the consensus on the one-China policy.”

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 Military experts have explained that the PLA exercise is a force forecast to demonstrate China’s ability to attack Taipei in the future. The PLA Rocket Force launched 11 ballistic missiles, including DF-15B missiles, striking areas on the north, northeast, south, southeast, and east flanks of the Taiwan Islands.

 A Taiwanese citizen wondered why his country’s military didn’t shoot down his DF-15B using the Patriot anti-ballistic missile system. However, the PLA Rocket Force’s 11 ballistic missiles did not fly over Taiwan to provoke a response from the Patriot batteries.

The missile continued to fly near Taiwan’s airspace on Saturday. The PLA broadcast the entire exercise through videos of jets flying near Taiwanese territory, missiles flying into the Taiwan Strait, and the PLA Navy crossing the centerline. Military propaganda is part of Beijing’s deterrence strategy against Taiwan and its neighbours.

Five of his ballistic missiles landed in Japan’s exclusive economic zone, raising concerns among Japanese defence officials about the potential impact of the PLA’s war game on the actual Taiwan emergency. . The PLA has also demonstrated precision strike capabilities by firing long-range guided attacks using the WS-03A Multiple Rocket Launch System (MRLS) and his PHL-16 missile system.

 The missile was launched from Pingtan Island in Fujian Province and landed in waters west of Taiwan. In addition to power projection from sea and land,  air penetration was amplified by the PLA. Since Aug. 2, a total of more than 207 PLA aircraft have entered Taiwan’s ADIZ and crossed the “central line,” said to be an artificial defensive barrier between mainland China and Taiwan. A PLA expert described the purpose of the exercise as the “reintegration” of Taiwan and the mainland.

“Ultimately, the exercises create the conditions for the immediate realization of future national unification,” said Meng Xiangqing, a professor at the National Defense University, in a widely reported program on China’s state-run TV.

 Social – Media trends on the mainland are off the charts. The hashtag ‘People’s Liberation Army launches series of targeted military operations’ on Weibo has earned him 2.5 billion views. Another hashtag, “Only One China,” has seen him over 2 billion times in the last few days. Alongside military exercises, Taiwan’s critical digital networks have been hit by cyberattacks originating from addresses originating in China and Russia. 

Beijing has taken several steps to show its disgust over Pelosi’s visit. The General Administration of Customs has suspended the import of 100 Taiwanese products, including tea leaves, dried fruits, honey, cocoa beans and vegetables. Imposing economic costs on Taiwan is a strategy already seen in Beijing’s troubled relations with the United States and Australia.

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China’s foreign ministry has cancelled the Sino-US theatre commanders’ meeting, the Sino-US defence policy coordination meeting, and the Sino-US military consultation agreement. The ministry also announced the suspension of US-China cooperation on repatriation of illegal immigrants, cooperation on mutual legal assistance in criminal matters, cooperation on cross-border crime, cooperation on counter-narcotics, and the suspension of talks on climate change.

Another accidental escalation is feared as phone lines between officials in both countries have been put down. A senior Chinese military official did not answer a phone call from US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on Friday. 

The current state of tense U.S.-China relations is likely to take months before the two sides come to terms with Taiwan’s new status quo. looked like About 10 Chinese and Taiwanese warships navigated the narrow space of the Taiwan Strait, with some Chinese ships crossing the centerline.

 ” During recent exercises conducted by China, we experienced coercion and tension in the Taiwan Straits as it attempted to change the status quo. The ROC military does not seek escalation, but will not give in to challenges and respond with common sense,” Taiwan’s Ministry of Defense said in a tweet.  President Tsai made a special address to the Taiwanese people, saying that Beijing’s actual fire drills were “irresponsible”.

” As long as both sides of the strait keep the status quo, and are open to constructive dialogue, we will continue to strive for consensus.” Tsai said. Even Taiwan’s opposition Kuomintang, which is trying to build ties with Beijing, has condemned military exercises around Taiwan. 

Despite an influx of comments on Chinese social media and mounting rhetoric on Chinese state television,  newspapers only briefly reported on military exercises in Taiwan.  Experts believe the Chinese government should have held large-scale military exercises in response to Pelosi’s visit.

Some have called the current series of tensions the Fourth Cross-Strait Crisis, while others are not convinced.  China in world news

 India and China held a special meeting on August 2  to discuss recent PLA Air Force airspace incursions at the Chushulu-Mold rendezvous. A source told her ANI news agency, “During her military talks, the Indian side has expressed strong opposition to China’s air activities in the vicinity of the eastern districts of Ladakh for more than a month. We urge them to avoid violent activities,” he said.

The talks came after a stalemate between the People’s Liberation Army and the Indian Air Force (IAF) was reported in the media on  June 25th, when the PLA’s J-11 aircraft took real control at 4 a.m. I flew very close to the line (LAC). As if the news of tensions in the LAC weren’t enough, India and the US are planning to hold the annual Yudhi Abiyas exercise in Auli, Uttarakhand from 14-31 October. The 2021 edition of Yudh Abhyas was held in Alaska, USA.

The training program has existed since 2004 as part of the UN Peacekeeping Scenario Exercise, but the current exercise under tension with China highlights the role of the India-US partnership in the regional security architecture. I’m here. On 5 August 2019, the Narendra Modi government announced the lifting of Kashmir’s Article 370 semi-autonomous status.

China’s actions in his LAC since 2020 have often been cited by some commentators as related to lifting measures. Last week, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs commented on an opening day.

 “China’s position on the Kashmir issue is clear and consistent. said the need to exercise restraint and caution, in particular parties should avoid adopting measures that unilaterally change the status quo or increase tensions. We urge India and Pakistan to settle their related disputes peacefully through dialogue and consultation,” said  Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying.

 India and China are at odds over several issues in South Asia. India recently objected to a visit to Sri Lanka by the Chinese research vessel Yuan Wang 5. The ship is still underway. However, Sri Lanka appears to have agreed to ask Beijing to postpone the ship’s visit.

Foreign ministers from the member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations met in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, amid rising tensions in the Taiwan Strait. The Chinese Foreign Minister also attended the negotiations in Phnom Penh, but the negotiations did not proceed smoothly. China has cancelled a scheduled bilateral meeting with Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi. 

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John Culver compared the current cross-strait crisis to the cross-strait crisis of 1995-1996, saying, “The PLA in the mid-1990s was just a Chihuahua of sorts.” Culver is a former  East Asian National Intelligence Service agent and CIA analyst specializing in China. He met with SupChina’s Emperor Guo to discuss the course of current cross-strait tensions. Chinascope recommends listening to the conversation.

edited and proofread by nikita sharma 

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