Taiwan tests unidentified missiles amid China row

Tensions over Taiwan Strait are high as China, US, Taiwan increase military movement


Anadolu Agency June 12, 2020
PHOTO: AA

ANKARA: Amid simmering tensions with China, Taiwan has test-fired unidentified missiles off its eastern and southern coasts, a media report said on Friday.

The test marked the start of a four-day program that is part of the self-ruled island's efforts to boost its defences against mainland China, according to the daily South China Morning Post (SCMP).

It was held off Taiwan's eastern county of Taitung and the Jiupeng military base in the southern county of Pingtung on Thursday night.

Taiwan's Defense Ministry, as well as developer National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology, refused to divulge any details about the missiles.

Local media reports claimed the missiles fired from Pingtung were the Tien Kung-3 (Sky Bow-3) 200-kilometre-range (124 miles) surface-to-air missile designed to intercept guided missiles coming from mainland China.

The Tien Kung-3 successfully intercepted a missile fired from Taitung during the test, the SCMP report said.

China and Taiwan, which the former claims as a breakaway province, are at loggerheads in the Taiwan Strait, with the US backing Taipei amid increasing military movement.

Last Tuesday, several Chinese Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets flew southwest into Taiwan, after a US C-40A transport plane made a rare flight into Taiwan over the southwest coast, according to SCMP.

Taiwan will also hold its annual military exercises in July and September.

The Han Kuang exercises "will test the country's asymmetric capabilities to ward off hostile forces at sea and along its beaches," the Defense Ministry said last week.

While Beijing considers Taiwan a Chinese province, Taipei has maintained its independence since 1949 and has diplomatic relations with 15 countries.

China refuses diplomatic relations with any country that recognises Taiwan, a move the US stops short of officially.

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