China’s warplane incursions into Taiwan air defence zone doubled in 2022

China’s warplane
incursions into Taiwan’s air defence zone nearly doubled in 2022, with a surge
in fighter jet and bomber sorties as Beijing intensified threats towards the
island democracy.
Self-ruled Taiwan
lives under constant threat of invasion. Communist party rulers claim the
island as part of China’s territory and have vowed to seize it one day.
Relations have been
icy for years under President Xi Jinping, China’s most assertive leader in a
generation.
2022 saw a deeper
deterioration, as Xi’s military ramped up incursions and launched the largest
war games in decades to protest against a visit by US House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi in August.
China sent 1,727
planes into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone (ADIZ) in 2022, according
to an AFP database based on daily updates released by Taipei’s defence
ministry.
That compares with
about 960 incursions in 2021 and 380 in 2020.
Fighter jet sorties
more than doubled from 538 in 2021 to 1,241 while incursions by bombers,
including the nuclear-capable H6, went from 60 to 101.
Last year also saw the
first incursions by drones, with all 71 reported by Taiwan’s military coming
after Pelosi’s visit.
Military analysts say
China has used the incursions to probe Taiwan’s defences, exhaust its ageing
air force and voice displeasure over western support for Taipei, especially the
United States.
“They want to show their determination, their
will and to coerce the United States: don’t get too close to their red lines,
don’t cross their red lines,” Lee Hsi-min, Taiwan’s former chief of general
staff, told AFP.
China sent 71
warplanes to conduct a “strike exercise” on 25 December in response to what it
described as “escalating collusion and provocations” by Washington and Taipei.
That came days after
US president Joe Biden signed off on up to $10bn in military aid to Taiwan.
August saw a record
440 sorties by Chinese warplanes, the same month Pelosi became the
highest-ranking US lawmaker to visit Taiwan in 25 years.
“The more frequent
sorties are worrying and compel the Taiwanese side to be in a perpetual state
of alert to ensure that the PLA (People’s Liberation Army) does not use them as
cover for an attack against Taiwan,” Taipei-based political and military
analyst J Michael Cole told AFP.
However, he also said
a rise in incursions “does not signify that (China) is ready to use force at an
earlier date against Taiwan – at least not an invasion scenario, which would
require months of mobilisation”.
Many nations maintain
air defence identification zones, including the United States, Canada, South
Korea, Japan and China, which are not the same as a country’s airspace.
They instead encompass
a much wider area in which any foreign aircraft is expected to announce itself
to local aviation authorities.
Analysts say China’s
increased probing of Taiwan’s defence zone is part of wider “grey-zone” tactics
that keep the island pressured.
“The PRC (People’s
Republic of China) is launching a war of attrition on the Taiwanese military,”
said Richard Hu, deputy director of National Chengchi University’s Taiwan
Centre for Security Studies.
While China intends to
collect crucial intelligence and “readiness parameters”, such as how quickly
and from where Taiwan’s interceptions take place, an invasion remains a hugely
risky and costly endeavour.
The mountainous island
would be a formidable challenge for any military to conquer.
“In terms of taking
Taiwan by force, PRC is still confronting a number of vital challenges such as
sending hundreds of thousands of troops across the Taiwan Strait,” said Hu, a
retired army major general.