2025-12-29 00:00:00 Militer Tiongkok mengumumkan pada hari Senin bahwa mereka memobilisasi unit angkatan darat, angkatan laut, udara dan roket di sekitar Taiwan untuk âlatihan militer besar-besaranâ yang bertujuan untuk memberikan âperingatan seriusâ terhadap segala dorongan untuk kemerdekaan Taiwan dan âkekuatan eksternalâ untuk campur tangan terhadap pulau tersebut.
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Follow Chinaâs military announced Monday it was mobilizing army, navy, air and rocket units around Taiwan for âmajor military drillsâ aimed at sending a âserious warningâ against any push for Taiwanese independence and âexternalâ forces interfering with the island.
The exercises â dubbed âJustice Mission-2025â â would test combat readiness and âblockade and control of key ports and critical areasâ from Monday, Chinaâs Eastern Theater Command said.
Live-fire activities would take place in five maritime and airspace zones encircling the island on Tuesday, according to information released by the command.
Taiwanâs government condemned the drills, accusing China of âmilitary intimidation,â while its defense ministry said it was âfully on guardâ and would âtake concrete action to defend the values of democracy and freedom.â Beijing has in recent years ramped up its military intimidation of the island â long seen as a potential flashpoint in a fractious region â including by simulating blockades.
Analysts say that based on the military announcements, the latest drills may be more explicitly aimed at practicing how to deny foreign military access to the area.
A Chinese ship is seen Monday in waters near Pingtan Island, in eastern China's Fujian province, to the east of Taiwan.
Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images The drills announced Monday would focus on training on precision strikes, combat readiness, and âsystemicâ blockade and control and âdeterrence outside the island chain,â according to Shi Yi, spokesperson for the Eastern Theater Command, in an apparent reference to a strategic line considered key in any potential regional military conflict.
China Coast Guard also said it was launching patrols in waters around Taiwan.
As of 3 p.m.
local time Monday, 14 Peopleâs Liberation Army warships and 14 Chinese Coast Guard vessels had been detected around Taiwan and its outlying islands, according to Lt.
Gen.
Hsieh Jih-sheng, deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence at Taiwanâs defense ministry.
In addition, an âamphibious assault strike groupâ consisting of four ships was detected in the southeastern waters of Taiwan, Hsieh said, and 89 warplanes were detected in the skies around Taiwan.
However, no warplanes or warships had entered Taiwanâs territorial waters or airspace so far, Hsieh said.
The military flex appears to follow a playbook Beijing has used in the past: launching major drills at sensitive moments to express its displeasure.
Washington and Taipei earlier this month announced what could become one of the United Statesâ biggest-ever military sales to the island, and Taiwanâs president is pushing for the approval of a historic special defense budget â developments that have irked Beijing.
Meanwhile, China and Japan have been locked in a weeks-long diplomatic spat over comments the Japanese prime minister made about Taiwan.
More than 100,000 travelers are expected to be affected by the drills, according to Taiwanâs Civil Aviation Administration, with 857 international flights impacted and 84 domestic flights canceled.
âCollusive actionsâ Chinaâs ruling Communist Party claims the self-governing democracy of Taiwan as its own territory, despite never having controlled it, and has vowed to take control of the island, by force if necessary.
âThis exercise serves as a serious warning to âTaiwan independenceâ separatist forces and external interfering forces,â said Shi, the command spokesperson, using what appeared to be a veiled reference to the US and its allies.
â(It) is a legitimate and necessary action to safeguard national sovereignty and maintain national unity.â Later Monday, Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang urged ârelevant countries to abandon the illusion of âusing Taiwan to contain China,ââ and refrain from âchallenging Chinaâs resolve and will to defend its core interests.â A ship fires a weapon during drills east of Taiwan, in this screenshot from a video released by the Eastern Theater Command of China's People's Liberation Army on Monday.
Eastern Theater Command/Reuters Other voices cited in Chinese state media were more explicit.
In an interview published on a social CCTV, military analyst Fu Nan pointed to the US and Taiwan arms deal when asked why the drills were taking place at this time, calling it an âescalationâ of âcollusive actions.â In a statement, Taiwanâs presidential spokesperson Karen Kuo said the drills âblatantly undermine the security and stability status quo of the Taiwan Strait and the Indo-Pacific regionâ and âopenly challenges international laws and order.â Taiwanâs President Lai Ching-te champions Taiwanâs sovereignty but has not formally called for independence.
He has pledged to maintain the status quo.
US arms deal The landmark $11.1 billion arms deal between US and Taiwan includes HIMARS rocket systems, anti-tank and anti-armor missiles, loitering drones, howitzers and military software.
Washington recognizes the Peopleâs Republic of China as the sole legitimate government of China, but maintains close unofficial ties with Taipei, which have strengthened in recent years.
It is bound by law to provide the island with the means to defend itself and supplies it with defensive weaponry.
Beijing slammed the recent arms deal announced between the two, with its Foreign Ministry earlier this month saying the move âinfringes on Chinaâs sovereignty, security and territorial integrityâ and âundermines peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.â Related article Soldiers of the 58th Artillery Command mobolize the HIMARS missile system to a tactical position, as part of the ongoing Han Kuang military exercise, in Taichung, Taiwan, on July 12, 2025.
Daniel Ceng/Anadolu/Getty Images Rockets, howitzers and suicide drones: US and Taiwan announce one of their biggest-ever arms deals When asked whether the drills were in response to the US-Taiwan arms deal, a spokesperson for Chinaâs Foreign Ministry on Monday referenced Taiwanâs governing party and said the exercises were âa severe punishment for the separatist forces seeking independence through force.â âTheir attempt to seek independence through the US, even at the cost of turning Taiwan into a powder keg, fully exposes their vicious nature as peace disruptors, troublemakers, and war instigators,â the spokesperson, Lin Jian, added.
Taiwan is seen by Beijing as the principal âred lineâ in US-China relations, with Chinese officials long condemning the unofficial relationship between Taipei and Washington.
Hsieh Jih-sheng, deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence at Taiwan's defense ministry, speaks at a press conference in Taipei, Taiwan about China's military drills on Monday.
Wen-Yee Lee/Reuters Taiwan has been ramping up military purchases in recent years as it comes under increasing pressure from Beijing, with Chinese aircraft and ships present almost daily around Taiwan as well as regular large-scale exercises in and over the surrounding waters.
Parts of latest deal, however, are expected to be paid for as part of an historic $40 billion special defense budget Taiwanâs President Lai Ching-te proposed in late November.
It has struggled to gain approval in Taiwanâs opposition-controlled legislature, which is locked in an acrimonious gridlock.
Regional frictions around Taiwan have also been heightened in recent weeks as Beijing has unleashed a diplomatic and economic pressure campaign on US ally Japan after its Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested her country could respond militarily if China were to move to take control of Taiwan by force.
The announcement of the latest military drills has been accompanied by the usual release of nationalistic propaganda geared toward Chinaâs domestic audience, including a poster showing fiery arrows reigning down on the island captioned âArrow of Justice, Control and Denial.â Another AI-generated video titled âJoint Operations to Thwart âTaiwan Independenceâ Attemptsâ showed images of menacing robot dogs and armed humanoid robots as well as planes and ships apparently bearing down on Taiwan.
âDeny interventionâ Chinaâs drills around Taiwan have grown in complexity and scope in recent years, with analysts pointing to the increased emphasis on simulating blockades and suggesting that Beijing may be looking to blur the line between drills and activities preparing for an attack.
The latest drills appear set to follow a similar encirclement strategy.
A notice released by Chinaâs Maritime Safety Administration under its Transport Ministry listed seven zones for military exercise, including live-fire drills, taking place Tuesday.
Five of those zones are the same as those announced by the Peopleâs Liberation Army.
A pair of Chinese JH-7A fighter-bomber aircraft fly over the Taiwan Strait as seen from Pingtan Island in eastern China's Fujian province on Monday.
Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images While those zones may cover both military and law enforcement exercises, taken together they appear to amount to a âde factoâ blockade inside the Taiwan Strait, according to K.
Tristan Tang, an associate fellow at the Secure Taiwan Associate Corporation, a Taipei-based think tank.
That would cover âalmost every sea routeâ between Taiwan and its strategically important, outlying islands Kinmen and Matsu close to the mainland, Tang told Berita.
Related article US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese leader Xi Jinping as they hold a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit at Gimhae International Airport, South Korea, on October 30, 2025.
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters Trumpâs security strategy is making a hard pivot on China.
Why now?
While analysts were awaiting further details of the operations, several observers within Taiwan pointed to what appeared to be signs of a heightened focus on denying external access to waters around Taiwan in the language used by the PLA as it announced the drills.
âThe PLA aims to deny intervention by foreign military forces in conflicts around Taiwan and keep them out,â Chieh Chung, an associate research fellow at Taiwanâs Institute for National Defense and Security Research (INDSR), told Berita.
âBeijing is very explicit about that objective in this drillâ.
A propaganda poster released by the PLA on Monday showing a huge shield emblazoned with Chinaâs Great Wall appeared to suggest as much.
It was shared on social media platform Weibo with the caption: âAll external intervention will perish upon the shield.â It was not immediately clear how long the saber-rattling would last.
Chinaâs Eastern Command said naval and air forces would run combat readiness patrols from December 29, and the command released a notice announcing the closure of maritime and airspace zones around Taiwan for live-fire drills during daytime hours on December 30.
This story has been updated with additional information.
Beritaâs Fred He and Billy Stockwell contributed to this report.
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