City
Epaper

Taiwan detects heightened Chinese incursions around territory

By ANI | Updated: May 8, 2025 07:02 IST

Taipei [Taiwan], May 8 : Taiwan's Ministry of National Defence (MND) said that five sorties of the People's Liberation ...

Open in App

Taipei [Taiwan], May 8 : Taiwan's Ministry of National Defence (MND) said that five sorties of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) aircraft, eight People's Liberation Army Naval (PLAN) vessels and one official ship were detected operating around Taiwan until 6 am (local time) on Thursday.

Out of the five sorties, one crossed the median line and entered Taiwan's southwestern ADIZ.

In a post on X, Taiwan's MND stated, "5 sorties of PLA aircraft, 8 PLAN vessels and 1 official ship operating around Taiwan were detected up until 6 a.m. (UTC+8) today. 1 out of 5 sorties crossed the median line and entered Taiwan's southwestern ADIZ. We have monitored the situation and responded accordingly."

{{{{twitter_post_id####

Earlier on Wednesday, Taiwan's MND said that nine sorties of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) aircraft, nine People's Liberation Army Naval (PLAN) vessels and one official ship were detected.

"9 sorties of PLA aircraft, 9 PLAN vessels and 1 official ship operating around Taiwan were detected up until 6 a.m. (UTC+8) today. 3 out of 9 sorties crossed the median line and entered Taiwan's northern and southwestern ADIZ. We have monitored the situation and responded," Taiwan MND posted on X.

}}}}

Meanwhile, a recent study by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) sheds light on what has long been feared regarding Beijing's invasion strategy and emphasises the vital role that Taiwan's ports could play.

The ASPI study indicates that if China were to act on its longstanding threats to invade Taiwan, its ground forces would heavily rely on capturing the island's crucial port facilities, as Taiwan's beaches are ill-suited for large-scale military landings due to limited infrastructure and susceptibility to defensive gunfire.

The report emphasises that despite China revealing its enhanced beach landing barges unexpectedly, Taiwan's 14 viable beaches are naturally designed as "kill zones," underscoring the strategic importance of ports. Defence analyst Ian Easton noted that the success or failure of any invasion would likely depend on whether Chinese amphibious landing forces can capture, maintain, and utilise the island's significant port facilities, as quoted by ASPI.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentArmaan Malik to take stage for multi-lingual, genre-blending show in Mumbai this November

NationalKTR sends legal notice to Bandi Sanjay over phone-tapping allegations

BusinessFourFront Limited Received In-Principle Approval From BSE

InternationalSingapore FM Vivian Balakrishnan to visit Delhi for 3rd India-Singapore ministerial roundtable, presidential meeting

BusinessAVPN Global Conference 2025 Rallies Global Business Leaders and Social Investors to Drive Bold Action for an Inclusive World

International Realted Stories

InternationalBangladesh: Family of Awami League's student wing leader attacked, party blames BNP

InternationalBangladesh workers block Dhaka-Mymensingh highway over factory closures, unpaid wages

InternationalPashtun groups condemn military crackdown and firing in North Waziristan

InternationalHeat extremes drive major declines in tropical birds: study

InternationalSRA marks August 11 as 'Baloch Independence Day,' accuses Pakistan of occupying Balochistan after 1947