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Taiwan shooting down drone near China was ‘appropriate’, premier says

Taiwan shooting down drone near China was ‘appropriate’, premier says
A navy officer stand next to a PFG2-1110 Cheng Kung-class guided-missile frigate during the visit of the president of Taiwan (not pictured) in Penghu, Taiwan, 30 August 2022. Following the visit of the US House speaker, China stepped up its military maneuvers in early August 2022. EPA-EFE/RITCHIE B. TONGO

TAIPEI, Sept 2 (Reuters) - Taiwan's shooting down of a drone off the Chinese coast that buzzed a Taiwanese-controlled island was the most "appropriate" thing to do after repeated warnings, and China should exercise restraint, Taiwan Premier Su Tseng-chang said on Friday.

For the first time, Taiwan’s military shot down an unidentified civilian drone that entered its airspace near an islet near China’s Xiamen city on Thursday, after the government vowed tough measures against a rise in intrusions.

China responded that Taiwan was trying to “hype up tensions” over the incident, which follows the island’s complaints of harassment regarding drones from China flying close to the Kinmen islands, as Beijing stages military drills around Taiwan.

Su told reporters Taiwan had repeatedly issued warnings and asked China “not to encroach on our doorstep”.

He added, “They repeatedly ignored our warnings to leave and we had no choice but to exercise self-defence and shoot. This is the most appropriate reaction after repeated restraint and warnings.”

China should exercise restraint, Su said.

“We will never provoke, and we will do the most appropriate thing to protect our land and our people.”

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Taiwan’s ruling party’s “attempt to hype up tensions does not mean anything”.

Taiwan media cited China’s Taiwan Affairs Office as saying in response to the drone’s downing that it was “extremely ridiculous” that Taiwan was trying to “hype up confrontation”.

The drone was shot down after entering restricted air space near the tiny Lion islet, and crashed into the sea, according to Taiwan’s military.

The Kinmen defence command said that on Friday its forces detected two further drones which “quickly” flew back to Xiamen after troops fired flares to warn them away.

Chinese forces have been exercising near Taiwan since early last month, following the visit to Taipei of U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, which infuriated Beijing.

China views democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory, despite the strong objections of the government in Taipei.

At least two videos of recent drone trips have circulated widely on Chinese social media, in one of which Taiwanese soldiers were seen throwing stones at the craft.

Su said these videos were made for China’s “propaganda at home”, adding to the anger of Taiwan’s people.

Taiwan fired warning shots at a drone for the first time on Tuesday shortly after President Tsai Ing-wen said she had ordered the military to take “strong countermeasures” against what she termed Chinese provocations.

Tsai has championed the idea of “asymmetric warfare”, to make its forces more mobile and hard to attack, and speaking via video link to a forum in Prague on Friday, Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said that remained a focus.

“To safeguard our security and sovereignty, Taiwan will continue to develop its asymmetric capacity to make the invasion across the Strait very difficult and costly,” he said.

Taiwan has controlled Kinmen, which at its closest point is a few hundred metres (feet) from Chinese territory, since the defeated Republic of China government fled to Taipei after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong’s communists in 1949.

During the height of the Cold War, China regularly shelled Kinmen and other Taiwanese-held islands along the Chinese coast, and while they retain a sizeable military presence they are now also tourist destinations.

By Yimou Lee

(Reporting by Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Eduardo Baptista in Beijing and Robert Muller in Prague; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan, Clarence Fernandez and Simon Cameron-Moore)

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Beyond Fedup says:

    Like the hideous Putin Russians, the Chinese bullies only understand strength. You have to stand up to them and the cowards that they are, will back away.

    • Cunningham Ngcukana says:

      Taiwan is not Ukraine and has the capability to level several Chinese major cities and has military ties with the US and Japan. The theatrics China runs with phantom military exercises around Taiwan are just that in the Pacific geopolitical configuration. They have a lot of belligerent talk but will never provoke a situation that will lead to the levelling of Beijing and destruction of its economic might and nascent military strength. It has the QUAD to face up to on any military miscalculation. However, any military confrontation will have major global geopolitical implications on global supply chain. The Chinese are not about to commit economic and military suicide. The bloodied nose of Putin in Ukraine and the long military involvement in Ukraine is something the
      Chinese do not want. The system they have should they engage in any military adventure would collapse. The Soviet Union collapsed because of the huge costs of war in Afghanistan that were unsustainable. Gorbachev and the KGB had come to assess the financial and social costs of the war as he succeeded Andropov another KGB leader. The costs of adventurism of Putin are not only paid in Russia but across the globe with rising inflation due to the costs of energy and food costs as a result of grain and fertiliser shortages. The Iran deal with lessen the costs of oil and the possibility of gas from the Caspian sea will lessen permanently the demand of Russian energy.

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