The Taiwan military recently completed its Hankuang No. 18 (
The Hankuang exercises simulated the army's planned five-step war-development sequence: information warfare, electronic warfare, control of airspace, control of the seas and a counterattack on China.
Teachers from the National Defense University (
They then launched another information warfare assault, using the Internet to send e-bombs and computer viruses in an attempt to cripple Taiwan's information-gathering system.
"Task Force Tiger" countered by using advanced Internet firewalls to keep enemy hackers out and by launching computer viruses against the enemy's computer systems.
The army says it has significantly raised its ability to break enemy database codes and firewall systems. In the exercise it successfully broke into "the enemy's" computers to cripple its information systems.
Taiwan managed to win the information warfare part of the computerized war game, defeating the invading army's information warfare department for the third consecutive year -- making up for deficiencies in the missile defense system.
US observers were reportedly impressed with the army's ability to counter enemy hackers and its ability to design firewalls, and they estimated that Taiwan's information warfare abilities exceed those of China by far.
In related news, a CIA analysis recently concluded that the Chinese government may have the goal of using cyber attacks to disrupt Taiwanese and US military systems, but it does not currently have the capability to do so.
A US official announced the findings on Thursday.
"The view is that they don't have that capability -- being able to disrupt Taiwan's infrastructure, US military systems -- but you have to be mindful of it and concerned that it may be their goal," the official told reporters on condition of anonymity.
The Los Angeles Times on Thursday reported that the CIA report said, "The mission of Chinese special forces include physical sabotage" of vulnerable systems.
"The People's Liberation Army does not yet have the capability to carry out its intended goal of disrupting Taiwanese military and civilian infrastructures or US military logistics through computer virus attacks," the CIA analysis said, according to the newspaper.
The brief analysis was distributed to US policy makers over the past week as part of a broader national security report.
Cyber disruptions originating in China are usually perpetrated by students during school breaks and tend to be temporary "harassments" such as the defacement of Web sites or virus attacks, the official said.
"A lot of the hacking attacks that we're seeing out of China are from non-state hackers," the official said.
There are 77 incidents of Taiwanese travelers going missing in China between January last year and last month, the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) said. More than 40 remain unreachable, SEF Secretary-General Luo Wen-jia (羅文嘉) said on Friday. Most of the reachable people in the more than 30 other incidents were allegedly involved in fraud, while some had disappeared for personal reasons, Luo said. One of these people is Kuo Yu-hsuan (郭宇軒), a 22-year-old Taiwanese man from Kaohsiung who went missing while visiting China in August. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office last month said in a news statement that he was under investigation
An aviation jacket patch showing a Formosan black bear punching Winnie the Pooh has become popular overseas, including at an aviation festival held by the Japan Air Self-Defense Force at the Ashiya Airbase yesterday. The patch was designed last year by Taiwanese designer Hsu Fu-yu (徐福佑), who said that it was inspired by Taiwan’s countermeasures against frequent Chinese military aircraft incursions. The badge shows a Formosan black bear holding a Republic of China flag as it punches Winnie the Pooh — a reference to Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) — who is dressed in red and is holding a honey pot with
Celebrations marking Double Ten National Day are to begin in Taipei today before culminating in a fireworks display in Yunlin County on the night of Thursday next week. To start the celebrations, a concert is to be held at the Taipei Dome at 4pm today, featuring a lineup of award-winning singers, including Jody Chiang (江蕙), Samingad (紀曉君) and Huang Fei (黃妃), Taipei tourism bureau official Chueh Yu-ling (闕玉玲) told a news conference yesterday. School choirs, including the Pqwasan na Taoshan Choir and Hngzyang na Matui & Nahuy Children’s Choir, and the Ministry of National Defense Symphony Orchestra, flag presentation unit and choirs,
China is attempting to subsume Taiwanese culture under Chinese culture by promulgating legislation on preserving documents on ties between the Minnan region and Taiwan, a Taiwanese academic said yesterday. China on Tuesday enforced the Fujian Province Minnan and Taiwan Document Protection Act to counter Taiwanese cultural independence with historical evidence that would root out misleading claims, Chinese-language media outlet Straits Today reported yesterday. The act is “China’s first ad hoc local regulations in the cultural field that involve Taiwan and is a concrete step toward implementing the integrated development demonstration zone,” Fujian Provincial Archives deputy director Ma Jun-fan (馬俊凡) said. The documents