The Bush administration has described a planned joint Chinese-Russian military exercise in the Yellow Sea north of Taiwan as one that could advance the "mutual goal of regional stability" in East Asia, despite some reports that paint the exercise as being eerily similar to a rehearsal for a joint invasion of Taiwan.
The exercise, prominently reported in the Washington Post Monday morning, is to start Thursday near the Russian city of Vladivostok, before moving to the Yellow Sea and China's Shandong Province.
The simulated land, sea and air operation would "seize a beachhead on China's Shandong peninsula in advance of an inland offensive" according to a senior Russian military official quoted by the Post.
INTERDICTION
The Russians would "deploy strategic, long-range bombers, capable of carrying nuclear weapons, which will fire cruise missiles at targets," on the surface of the sea, the report says.
As part of the strategy, the exercise would try to "prevent the vessels of any other countries from approaching the area" of the operations, the Post quoted a Russian military official as saying.
The Pentagon, in its recent annual report on Chinese military modernization, has painted a picture of a Chinese attack on Taiwan in similar terms to the description of the joint Russian-Chinese exercised planned for next week.
Most Washington academics and other China specialists agree that such plans would be elements in any Chinese attack on Taiwan, including efforts to prevent the US from coming to Taiwan's aid militarily and the reliance on some 700 ballistic missiles deployed against Taiwan.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters that the US has been "advised" about the Chinese-Russian exercises and "we are following the exercises."
But he said that the US would not be observing the joint Chinese-Russian exercises.
He asserted that the White House expects the exercises "will be conducted in a manner that supports the mutual goal of regional stability shared by the US, Russia and China."
Asked whether the US is concerned about the planned exercise in view of Russia's increasing supply of sophisticated weapons to China, McCormack said only, "we would hope that anything they do is not something that would be disruptive to the current atmosphere in the region."
McCormack did not mention Taiwan in his remarks.
TAIWAN FACTOR
The planned operation is well north of Taiwan, because Beijing was unsuccessful in efforts to get Russia to agree to hold it closer to the country, the Post cites Russian reports as saying.
"China tries to put the Taiwan question into every issue, but for Russia that was never the purpose of the exercises," the Post quotes a Moscow think tank analyst, Dmitry Kormilitsyn, as saying.
The exercise will simulate a mission to aid a state where law and order has broken down because of terrorist violence, the report said.
However, Beijing's official Xinhua news agency painted the joint exercise as strengthening China and Russia's capabilities in "jointly striking international terrorism, extremism or separatism."
The use of the word, "separatism," indicated Beijing might try to enlist Moscow's support through the joint military exercises in its effort to retake Taiwan, the Post report noted.
UNCONCERNED
Meanwhile, the Ministry of National Defense (MND) played down the joint exercise, saying only that it wasn't "real."
MND Spokesman Rear Admiral Liu Chih-chien (
Liu said that since Russia proposed using strategic bombers to join the drill, the MND thinks the purpose of Russia joining the military exercise is to promote its advanced strategic arms to China, one of its biggest arms markets.
Liu said the MND would closely follow the exercise.
Additional reporting by Rich Chang
Taiwanese Olympic badminton men’s doubles gold medalist Wang Chi-lin (王齊麟) and his new partner, Chiu Hsiang-chieh (邱相榤), clinched the men’s doubles title at the Yonex Taipei Open yesterday, becoming the second Taiwanese team to win a title in the tournament. Ranked 19th in the world, the Taiwanese duo defeated Kang Min-hyuk and Ki Dong-ju of South Korea 21-18, 21-15 in a pulsating 43-minute final to clinch their first doubles title after teaming up last year. Wang, the men’s doubles gold medalist at the 2020 and 2024 Olympics, partnered with Chiu in August last year after the retirement of his teammate Lee Yang
FALSE DOCUMENTS? Actor William Liao said he was ‘voluntarily cooperating’ with police after a suspect was accused of helping to produce false medical certificates Police yesterday questioned at least six entertainers amid allegations of evasion of compulsory military service, with Lee Chuan (李銓), a member of boy band Choc7 (超克7), and actor Daniel Chen (陳大天) among those summoned. The New Taipei City District Prosecutors’ Office in January launched an investigation into a group that was allegedly helping men dodge compulsory military service using falsified medical documents. Actor Darren Wang (王大陸) has been accused of being one of the group’s clients. As the investigation expanded, investigators at New Taipei City’s Yonghe Precinct said that other entertainers commissioned the group to obtain false documents. The main suspect, a man surnamed
US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer began talks with high-ranking Chinese officials in Switzerland yesterday aiming to de-escalate a dispute that threatens to cut off trade between the world’s two biggest economies and damage the global economy. The US delegation has begun meetings in Geneva with a Chinese delegation led by Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng (何立峰), Xinhua News Agency said. Diplomats from both sides also confirmed that the talks have begun, but spoke anonymously and the exact location of the talks was not made public. Prospects for a major breakthrough appear dim, but there is
The number of births in Taiwan fell to an all-time monthly low last month, while the population declined for the 16th consecutive month, Ministry of the Interior data released on Friday showed. The number of newborns totaled 8,684, which is 704 births fewer than in March and the lowest monthly figure on record, the ministry said. That is equivalent to roughly one baby born every five minutes and an annual crude birthrate of 4.52 per 1,000 people, the ministry added. Meanwhile, 17,205 deaths were recorded, resulting in a natural population decrease of 8,521, the data showed. More people are also leaving Taiwan, with net