MESSAGE
DATE | 2020-09-27 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Who is our trading partner in China?
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Here is three articles in the WSJ outlining current actions in China to subjugate and destroy the Muslim nation in Xinjiang and there persecution of political decent. Then there is the threat to Taiwan with recent military action by Communist China threatening Taiwan independence. This is a no holds bar dictatorship with a cruel and brutal track record of supressing peoples and expanding its colonial asperations.
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https://www.wsj.com/articles/xi-says-china-will-continue-efforts-to-assimilate-muslims-in-xinjiang-11601133450
wsj.com Xi Says China Will Continue Efforts to Assimilate Muslims in Xinjiang Chun Han Wong 6-8 minutes
HONG KONG—Chinese leader Xi Jinping declared success in his approach to governing the region of Xinjiang, signaling no letup in the Communist Party’s forceful campaign to assimilate millions of ethnic Muslims on the country’s northwestern frontier.
“Practice has proven that the party’s strategy for governing Xinjiang in the new era is completely correct,” and it must continue for the long term, Mr. Xi said at a two-day party conference on Xinjiang policy that concluded Saturday, according to a state media report.
Addressing a Beijing gathering of officials from the party leadership, central government and Xinjiang, among others, Mr. Xi also ordered the entire Communist Party to consider it a political mission to implement the Xinjiang strategy, which he said brought the region closer toward long-term peace and stability.
Managing Xinjiang affairs well “is a major task for the entire party and the entire nation,” and one that requires strengthening the party’s “unified leadership” across the country, Mr. Xi said.
Xi Jinping said Xinjiang’s gross domestic product grew by an annual average of about 7.2% from 2014 to 2019. Photo: Ding Lei/Zuma Press
These remarks marked Mr. Xi’s most full-throated public endorsement of the high-pressure campaign Beijing has waged to stamp out separatist sentiment in Xinjiang—an effort that has encompassed mass detentions and forced-assimilation of ethnic Muslims over recent years, and stirred international backlash over allegations of widespread human-rights abuses.
This week’s conference was the party’s first major conclave on Xinjiang policy since 2014. It is expected to chart Beijing’s agenda in the region for the next five years or so. The meeting wasn’t announced ahead of time.
The Communist Party has long struggled to manage Xinjiang, a mountainous frontier abutting Central Asia where about 12 million Turkic-speaking Muslim Uighurs live. Separatist sentiment among Uighurs has simmered there for decades, occasionally flaring into deadly attacks against symbols of Beijing’s authority and the country’s Han Chinese majority.
The party’s previous Xinjiang policy conclave took place amid a spate of deadly attacks that were attributed to Uighur separatists. Among them was a bomb-and-knife attack in April 2014 that rocked Xinjiang’s capital of Urumqi shortly after Mr. Xi concluded a tour of the region. A bomb attack at a Urumqi street market the following month killed at least 31 people, just days before that year’s Xinjiang policy conclave.
At the May 2014 conference, Mr. Xi demanded an all-out effort to quash separatism and terrorist activities in Xinjiang, and his administration has since adopted increasingly hard-line measures to stamp out resistance to Communist rule in the region.
These efforts have intensified dramatically since 2017, as local authorities rolled out the use of blanket digital surveillance, mass-internment camps and political-indoctrination programs to rein in the Uighur population. Officials have also targeted Uighur culture, demolishing neighborhoods and tearing down mosques and other religious sites.
Human-rights advocates and Western governments have denounced these methods, while United Nations officials have voiced concern and sought access to Xinjiang to carry out fact-finding visits. Chinese officials have denied committing any rights abuses, while portraying their policies in Xinjiang as a benign effort to help Uighurs improve their lives. They have also declared success in restoring stability to the region, saying no cases of violent terrorism have taken place there for more than three years.
This week, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute published a pair of research reports—based largely on satellite imagery—alleging that Chinese authorities have razed or damaged two-thirds of the mosques in Xinjiang and continued to expand mass-detention camps for Uighurs over the last past year.
China’s Foreign Ministry rejected those claims as smears. Chinese officials have previously accused ASPI, which is partly funded by the Australian and U.S. governments, of concocting research on China—an allegation that ASPI researchers have denied.
In his conference speech, Mr. Xi made no reference to these programs or his 2014 demands for eradicating separatism and terrorism in Xinjiang. Instead, he listed what he described as major policy achievements since 2014, including economic and social development, rising incomes and reduced poverty rates.
Mr. Xi said Xinjiang’s gross domestic product grew by an annual average of about 7.2% from 2014 to 2019, reaching the equivalent of about $200 billion at current rates, while more than 2.9 million residents were assessed to have “escaped poverty” over the same period.
“On the whole, Xinjiang is presenting a favorable situation of social stability and people living and working in peace,” Mr. Xi said. “The facts provide ample proof that our country is successful in its ethnic policy.”
In an apparent response to international criticism of Beijing’s Xinjiang policy, Mr. Xi demanded comprehensive efforts to “tell Xinjiang’s stories well,” and to publicize the region’s development successes “with the courage of our convictions.”
Mr. Xi also called for greater efforts to strengthen a sense of Chinese national identity in Xinjiang, such as through research and educational programs that inculcate correct attitudes on history, culture and religion. Efforts to “sinicize” Islam—infusing pro-party ideas into religious practices—must also continue, he said.
The goal, according to Mr. Xi, is to ensure the “common consciousness of the Chinese nation takes root deep inside people’s hearts.”
Write to Chun Han Wong at chunhan.wong-at-wsj.com
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China Razed Thousands of Xinjiang Mosques in Assimilation Push, Report Says China Razed Thousands of Xinjiang Mosques in Assimilation Push, Report Says Chao Deng 8-10 minutes
New research shows Chinese authorities have razed or damaged two-thirds of the mosques in China’s remote northwestern region of Xinjiang, further illuminating the scope of a forced cultural-assimilation campaign targeting millions of Uighur Muslims.
In a report published Friday, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute said satellite imagery showed that roughly 8,500 mosques, close to a third of the region’s total, have been demolished since 2017. Another 7,500 have sustained damage, the report said.
Important Islamic sacred sites, including shrines, cemeteries and pilgrimage routes, were also demolished, damaged or altered, the study found.
On Thursday, the Canberra-based think tank published another report, also based largely on satellite imagery, that identified more than 380 suspected detention facilities in Xinjiang it said were newly built or had been expanded significantly since 2017. At least 61 of the sites have been expanded since July 2019, including more than a dozen that were still under construction this year, it said.
Human-rights groups and Western governments say Xinjiang authorities have detained a million or more Uighurs and a smaller number of ethnic Kazakhs in a sprawling network of internment camps. Their existence has been previously reported by The Wall Street Journal and other news organizations. China’s government has characterized them as vocational schools.
The two reports challenge recent assertions from Chinese officials that they are protecting religious sites in Xinjiang and closing down re-education camps.
“The Chinese government’s destruction of cultural heritage aims to erase, replace and rewrite what it means to be Uyghur,” said the report Friday, using an alternative spelling for the group.
China’s Foreign Ministry on Friday repeated its claims that Xinjiang has around 24,000 mosques and that the number of them per capita among Muslims in Xinjiang is higher than in many Muslim countries. It said that China fully protects the human and religious rights of all ethnic minorities and described the ASPI report as “smear and rumor.” It denied the existence of detention camps in Xinjiang.
Uighur men praying in a mosque in Hotan, in Xinjiang, in 2015. Photo: greg baker/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
The Chinese government has previously accused ASPI, which is partly funded by the Australian and U.S. governments, of concocting research on China. The think tank’s researchers have rejected those criticisms, presenting evidence—oftentimes drawn from official Chinese sources—to support their claims.
China’s ruling Communist Party has long struggled to manage Xinjiang, which for decades has been home to a sporadically violent Uighur-led separatist movement. Since early 2017, the party has used blanket digital surveillance and the re-education camps to attempt to track and neutralize Uighurs it sees as threatening.
The campaign has evolved over time, with authorities moving on to demolishing Uighur neighborhoods and purging Uighur culture.
In its Friday report, ASPI estimated that around half of important Islamic sacred sites—many of which are supposed to be protected under Chinese law—have been damaged or altered since 2017. After locking up as many as a million people in camps in Xinjiang, Chinese authorities are destroying Uighur neighborhoods and purging the region's culture. They say they’re fighting terrorism. Their aim: to engineer a society loyal to Beijing. First published in March 2019. Photo illustration: Sharon Shi. Video: Clément Bürge
The report estimated there are fewer than 15,500 mosques left intact in Xinjiang, the lowest number since the 1980s, when Uighurs had just begun rebuilding mosques destroyed during Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution. Most of the land where mosques were razed remained vacant, it said.
The campaign is part of a longer-term trend to transform communities in the name of public safety. The strategy has gained pace under President Xi Jinping who has called for the “Sinicization” of religion, said James Leibold, a professor at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, who contributed to both of the reports.
“The [Communist] Party is making assessments about the reliability of Uighurs and thinking of different ways to erase opposition and erase the Uighur people’s cultural religion and identity,” he said.
Under fire from Western governments, Chinese officials have portrayed the campaign in Xinjiang as a benign effort to help Uighurs improve their lives. Xinjiang’s governor, Shohrat Zakir, said in December that all of the people sent to re-education centers had “graduated,” suggesting the facilities would be shut down.
During a visit the following month, the Journal found that some facilities had indeed been closed, with former detainees sometimes sent away to work in factories. One facility had been converted into a prison after being previously described as a school.
Of the dozens of facilities ASPI identified as recently under construction, roughly half were higher-security facilities. The most-secure facilities had high walls, multiple layers of perimeter barriers, watchtowers and dozens of cell blocks with no apparent outside exercise yard for detainees, it said.
Authorities are likely singling out people who they have lost hope of re-educating and putting them into long periods of incarceration, said Mr. Leibold. It is “the only way to really explain their pretty remarkable expansion,” he said.
The building up of some facilities comes despite unprecedented pressure from Washington amid rising tensions between the U.S. and China. China has turned the northwestern region of Xinjiang into a vast experiment in domestic surveillance. WSJ investigated what life is like in a place where one's every move can be monitored with cutting-edge technology. First published in December 2017. Video: Clément Bürge/WSJ; Image: DeepGlint
Since July, the U.S. government has imposed sanctions on companiesand individuals it accuses of being involved in human-rights violations in the region, including Xinjiang’s top official, and blacklisted several Xinjiang-based suppliers to major Western brands.
The increased scrutiny has made it harder for Western companies to do business in Xinjiang. Earlier this month, the White House blocked imports of goods from Xinjiang allegedly produced using forced labor. Meanwhile, several auditors have stopped offering to inspect companies’ labor conditions in Xinjiang factories, citing problems like police pressure.
One challenge in pressuring China’s government over its Xinjiang policies is the relative silence of Muslim-majority countries. ASPI made its work available in 10 different languages to try to raise awareness beyond the English-speaking world, said Mr. Leibold.
The report called on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or Unesco, which promotes the preservation of cultural heritage, to confront the Chinese government and investigate the state of Uighur and Islamic cultural sites in Xinjiang.
A Unesco spokeswoman said the organization had no immediate comment. The International Council on Monuments and Sites, which advises the organization, didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng-at-wsj.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-sentences-xi-critic-ren-zhiqiang-to-18-years-in-prison-11600755598?mod=world_major_3_pos3
wsj.com China Sentences Xi Critic Ren Zhiqiang to 18 Years in Prison Chun Han Wong 9-11 minutes
HONG KONG—A Beijing court sentenced an influential businessman known for his outspoken criticism of China’s leader, Xi Jinping, to 18 years in prison, meting out harsh punishment in a corruption case that is likely to chill dissent within the Chinese political elite.
Ren Zhiqiang, 69 years old, was sentenced Tuesday after being convicted of corruption, receiving bribes, embezzlement and abuse of power, the Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People’s Court said in an online notice. Mr. Ren, a well-connected member of Beijing’s political and business circles, was also fined the equivalent of about $619,000.
The verdict came two months after the Communist Party expelled Mr. Ren over allegations of political disloyalty and corruption, and marked the culmination of a monthslong investigation against the retired real-estate mogul. Friends say he had disappeared in mid-March soon after writing an essay that appeared to excoriate Mr. Xi as an imperious clown for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
President Xi Jinping at an event to honor some of those involved in China's fight against Covid-19, in Beijing, Sept. 8. Photo: Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press
A former chairman of a state-owned property company, Mr. Ren has been the most prominent target in a broad crackdown on dissent in China this year. In recent months, a legal scholar known for criticizing Mr. Xi was detained briefly by police and then fired from a top Beijing university, while a retired party academic was stripped of her party membership and pension after an audio recording of her denouncing the Chinese leader surfaced online.
Mr. Ren’s sentencing also comes just weeks ahead of a major Communist Party conclave in October where top officials are due to discuss China’s long-term economic blueprint—an opportunity for Mr. Xi to imprint his authority as he grapples with a pandemic-ravaged domestic economy and fast-fraying ties with the U.S.
The harsh punishment for Mr. Ren “seems directed at China’s most-influential elite, reminding them to keep in line,” said Ryan Manuel, managing director of research company Official China, which is based in Hong Kong. “Xi brooks no challenge—you just can’t call him a clown. Ever.”
Mr. Ren was accused of wrongdoing from 2003 to 2017 that included embezzling and misappropriating more than the equivalent of $16.3 million at current rates, and receiving bribes valued at more than $184,000, according to the court notice. It said he was also charged with causing about $17.2 million in losses for state enterprises while reaping personal benefit.
The court said Mr. Ren had confessed to all charges and declined to appeal. He couldn’t be reached for comment. A friend of Mr. Ren’s said he was represented by a government-appointed lawyer.
In a departure from some high-profile corruption cases involving influential officials and party members in recent years, Mr. Ren’s trial received no official publicity when it took place earlier this month, and the court and state media haven’t released any courtroom imagery.
“ “Xi brooks no challenge—you just can’t call him a clown. Ever.” ”
— Ryan Manuel, research company Official China
As a party insider who was popular among ordinary Chinese for what many saw as his straight-talking style, Mr. Ren has been regarded as a potent symbol of dissent against Mr. Xi’s authority, and authorities are making an example of him by imposing a harsh sentence, China politics watchers said.
“They are killing a bull for the cattle to see,” said a retired politics professor in Beijing. Given Mr. Ren’s pedigree as a son of a former senior official, Mr. Xi likely hopes that imprisoning him will deter other outspoken members of the party elite, the professor said.
Friends say the case against Mr. Ren was politically motivated. In his essay, which began circulating on Chinese social media in early March, he focused on a Communist Party meeting in February where Mr. Xi addressed some 170,000 officials across the country via teleconference to issue instructions on managing the pandemic. Mr. Xi wasn’t named, but many readers inferred he was the target of Mr. Ren’s attacks.
“There stood not an emperor displaying his ‘new clothes,’ but a clown who stripped off his clothes and still insisted on being an emperor,” the essay read. “Despite holding up pieces and pieces of loincloth in trying to hide the reality of your nakedness, you don’t hide in the slightest your resolute ambition to become an emperor.”
The Communist Party expelled Mr. Ren in July, citing wide-ranging allegations spanning political misdeeds such as disloyalty and economic crimes including corruption. Investigators alleged Mr. Ren had deviated from party leadership on “major matters of principle,” published essays that oppose the party’s cardinal tenets, besmirched the party and the state, distorted party history, and showed disloyalty and dishonesty to the party.
The party’s statement on Mr. Ren’s expulsion included allegations that didn’t appear in Tuesday’s court notice, such as that he collaborated with his children to “wantonly accumulate wealth.”
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A former soldier whose father was a vice commerce minister, Mr. Ren has been called “Cannon Ren” for his outspoken views on topics ranging from real estate to politics, often shared through social-media posts. He has been widely seen as an influential member of the party elite, whose friends included senior officials such as Chinese Vice President Wang Qishan.
Mr. Ren has ruffled feathers before. In 2016, after he publicly questioned Mr. Xi’s demands for media loyalty, internet regulators shut down Mr. Ren’s Twitter-like Weibo microblog, where he had accumulated more than 37 million followers. The party also put Mr. Ren on probation for a year, during which he was stripped of all party duties and barred from voting or participating in internal elections.
Mr. Ren had steered clear of further trouble until this year, when he and other critics voiced anger about Beijing’s initial mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic—and incurred the party’s wrath.
Joining Mr. Ren in slamming the pandemic response was Xu Zhangrun, a former Tsinghua University law professor who came to prominence as a Xi critic with a 2018 essay accusing the leader of reviving Mao Zedong’s dictatorial style. Tsinghua dismissed Mr. Xu in July shortly after police detained him for nearly a week as punishment for allegedly soliciting prostitution—a charge he has denied.
The following month, the party revoked the membership of Cai Xia, a 67-year-old retired professor at Beijing’s elite Central Party School, after an audio recording emerged of her criticizing Mr. Xi and describing the party as a political zombie. Ms. Cai, who was reprimanded by school officials in 2016 over her outspoken support of Mr. Ren at the time, is currently in the U.S. and has continued lashing out at Mr. Xi’s leadership.
Then in September, police in Beijing detained a friend of Mr. Xu’s who had spoken up for him during his detention, according to her lawyer and Mr. Xu.
Geng Xiaonan and her husband, who jointly run a publishing company, were taken into custody on Sept. 9 over allegations that they were operating an illegal business, according to her lawyer, Shang Baojun, who said he hasn’t been able to meet the couple so far. Mr. Xu said he believes Ms. Geng, 46 years old, was detained due to her support for him.
“There used to be more channels for dissent that allowed one to sail close to the wind,” said Mr. Manuel, the researcher. “There are now none of these left.”
Write to Chun Han Wong at chunhan.wong-at-wsj.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ https://thehill.com/policy/defense/517573-taiwan-warns-china-to-back-off
thehill.com Taiwan warns China to 'back off' 2 minutes
Taiwan advised China on Tuesday to "back off," accusing the nation of threatening peace after a Beijing official rejected an observance of a marine median line.
Agence France-Presse reported Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu urged Beijing to "return to the civilized international standards" after a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman dismissed an established median in the Taiwan Strait, saying "Taiwan is an inseparable part of Chinese territory."
Despite Taiwan's more than seven-decades of self-rule since the Chinese Civil War, the People's Republic of China asserts the island is part of its territory.
"The median line has been a symbol of preventing military conflicts and maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait for many years," Wu said to reporters. "The Chinese foreign ministry's comment is equivalent of destroying the status quo."
Beijing has been adding pressure over its claimed rule of the island since the 2012 election of Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, who has been critical of the "one China" consensus.
On Friday, Taiwan scrambled several fighter jets after China sent 18 planes over the Taiwan Strait as a show of force while U.S. officials conducted meetings in Taiwan.
Taiwan accused China last year of violations of a long-held agreement after Chinese fighter jets crossed the median line for the first time in years.
This month, Chinese exercises have been ramping in the airspace beyond the median line, with Taiwanese authorities describing the move as a destabilization tactic.
Last week, the Trump administration announced plans to approve a large arms sale to Taiwan, including anti-ship missiles and other long-range missiles. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/taiwan-chinas-military-flew-planes-island-days-73211607
abcnews.go.com Taiwan: China's military flew surveillance planes on 3 days ABC News 3-4 minutes
Taiwan says China sent two military surveillance planes toward the island for three straight days and it dispatched patrols in response
TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Taiwan on Thursday condemned recent Chinese military activity after Beijing sent two military surveillance planes toward the island for three straight days, calling it a “deliberate provocation.”
Tensions have risen in the Taiwan Strait as the U.S. has stepped up its official engagement with the self-ruled island that China considers part of its national territory.
On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, China sent two planes into Taiwan's air defense identification zone, according to Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense. In response, the Taiwanese side dispatched air patrols, the ministry said.
“We oppose China using military force against Taiwan, deliberately violating Taiwan’s naval and airspace safety and damaging the status quo,” added Chiu Chui-Cheng, deputy minister at Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council. “Our government will continue to cooperate with countries with similar values.”
Asked about the sorties, Chinese defense ministry spokesperson Tan Kefei said they were aimed at demonstrating China’s “determination and ability to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
China is targeting “the interference of external forces and the very small number of Taiwan independence separatists and their separatist activities,” Tan said at a monthly briefing.
Last week, China sent a total of 37 warplanes, including bombers and fighter jets, across the Taiwan Strait in a warning as a high-level U.S. State Department official visited the island. The Taiwanese defense ministry said the planes crossed the midline of the Taiwan Strait.
The midline has acted as an unofficial buffer zone between China and Taiwan for decades, in what the Mainland Affairs Council called “a tacit agreement that has kept the peace.”
On Monday, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin denied the existence of any midline, saying that Taiwan is part of China. He also warned that China would retaliate for the U.S. visit. “We will take countermeasures, including against relevant individuals," he said.
Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen has remained defiant, visiting a military base on Tuesday and encouraging the personnel, in particular pilots and crew.
Taiwanese foreign minister Joseph Wu said in July that Chinese military exercises have increased in frequency and become “virtually a daily occurrence."
China has increased diplomatic and military pressure on Tsai’s government over her refusal to agree to China’s insistence that the island be considered part of Chinese territory. The vast majority of Taiwanese reject the prospect of political union with China under the “one country, two systems” framework used for Hong Kong.
Following Tsai's election in 2016, China cut off contact with the Taiwanese government and has sought to isolate it, siphoning off the island's diplomatic allies while ratcheting up political, military and economic pressure. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ https://www.reuters.com/article/taiwan-security/taiwans-armed-forces-strain-in-undeclared-war-of-attrition-with-china-idUSL3N2GM1SG
reuters.com Taiwan's armed forces strain in undeclared war of attrition with China Ben Blanchard 4-5 minutes
KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan (Reuters) - Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen visited a low-key but critical maintenance base for fighter jet engines on Saturday, offering encouragement as the Chinese-claimed island’s armed forces strain in the face of repeated Chinese air force incursions.
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen visits an Air Force maintenance centre at the Gangshan air base in Kaohsiung, Taiwan September 26, 2020. REUTERS/Ben Blanchard
This month alone, China’s drills have included its jets crossing the mid-line of the sensitive Taiwan Strait and exercising near the Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands in the South China Sea.
Beijing regards Taiwan as a wayward province and has never renounced the use of force to bring the democratic island under its control.
Taiwan’s air force has repeatedly scrambled to intercept Chinese jets. Though they have not flown over mainland Taiwan itself, the flights have ramped up pressure, both financial and physical, on Taiwan’s air force to ensure its aircraft are ready to go at any moment.
Visiting the Gangshan air base in southern Taiwan’s Kaohsiung, Tsai received a detailed account of how the maintenance crew is making sure Taiwan’s F-16 and other fighters are operating at peak performance.
She appeared slightly taken aback when told the cost of one small component for the F-CK-1 Ching-kuo Indigenous Defence Fighter was T$380,000 ($13,000).
Speaking later to sailors at the nearby Zuoying naval base, Tsai promised to be the strongest backer of the island’s armed forces.
“If there was no backup or help from you all, the military’s steadfast combat strength would be greatly reduced,” she said.
Taiwan’s air force is dwarfed by China’s, and the strain of the multiple sorties on Taiwan’s armed forces have begun to show.
Taiwan’s Defence Ministry this month said the “dramatic increase” in the threat level, along with the aircraft being “middle-aged” had led to a huge increase in maintenance costs not originally budgeted for.
Saldik Fafana, 21,a trainee air force engineer at the Gangshan base, said he had noticed an impact recently. “There is more work,” he told reporters.
‘CONSTANTLY ON EDGE’
Taiwan is revamping its fighter line-up.
The United States last year approved an $8 billion sale of F-16 fighter jets to Taiwan, a deal that would bringing the island’s total to more than 200, the largest F-16 fleet in Asia.
Premier Su Tseng-chang expressed concern on Wednesday about the cost of the tensions with China.
“Each time the communist aircraft harass Taiwan, our air force takes to the skies, and it is extremely costly. This isn’t only a burden for Taiwan, but quite a big one for China too,” he said.
One Taiwan-based diplomat, citing conversations with security officials, said China appeared to be waging a campaign of attrition with its frequent fly-bys.
“China is trying to wear out Taiwan’s pilots by keeping them constantly on edge,” the diplomat said on condition of anonymity.
Taiwan’s Defence Ministry, in a report to parliament last month, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, said China’s flights over the narrow strait’s mid-line were aimed at reducing Taiwan’s response time.
This has put “enormous pressure” on Taiwan’s frontline responders, it said.
Chinese flights to Taiwan’s southwest, including at night, are “an attempt to exhaust our air defences”, the ministry added, warning that if these become regular fixtures, they will “increase our burden of response”.
Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by William Mallard
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