China holds live-fire drills that Taiwan says may be part of ‘deterrence’

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Taiwan Says Live Fire China Drills May Part Deterrence Rcna176528 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

The Beijing-claimed island’s defense ministry said the exercises in Taiwan-facing Fujian province were part of routine training but could also be a Chinese effort to expand its “deterrent effect.”
Taiwan China Military Drills
A Taiwanese soldier in Taipei last week. Daniel Ceng / AFP via Getty Images

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan’s defense ministry said Tuesday that live-fire Chinese drills in a province facing the island are routine annual exercises but also possibly part of China’s “deterrence effect” in the waters of the Taiwan Strait.

China’s Maritime Safety Administration, in a notice late Monday, said an area around Niushan island in Fujian province would be closed off for four hours starting at 9 a.m. Tuesday (9 p.m. Monday ET) for live-fire drills. Niushan also sits just south of the Taiwan-controlled Matsu islands.

Taiwan’s defense ministry said in a statement that those exercises were part of routine Chinese training and were being closely monitored.

However, the ministry said it could not rule out that they were part of China’s “expanding its deterrent effect in conjunction with the dynamics in the Taiwan Strait.” It did not elaborate.

China last week held a day of war games around the island that Beijing views as its own territory, which it said were a warning against “separatist acts.”

Premier Cho Jung-tai told reporters in Taipei that China should not be carrying out any such exercises given their threat to regional peace and stability.

“No matter how large the scale of the drill is, they should not be frequent and close to Taiwan,” he said. “This will only cause unnecessary tension.”

Taiwan has complained for the past five years of regular Chinese warplanes and warship missions in the airspace and waters around the island.

China detests Taiwan President Lai Ching-te, who took office in May, as a “separatist” and has rebuffed his calls for talks.

Lai rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only Taiwan’s people can decide their future.

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