Taiwan’s Han Kuang drills begin amid rising China tensions

Taiwan launches its Han Kuang military drills, lasting 14 days, in response to increasing tensions and potential threats from China.
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TAIPEI: Taiwan's largest annual military drills, the Han Kuang exercises, started on Saturday with experts suggesting that the extended 14-day war games are a response to China's growing "gray zone" actions and its potential for launching a full-scale invasion of Taiwan, as reported by Taipei Times.

According to Taipei Times, this year's drills began with continuous computer-simulated war games, utilizing the US-made Joint Theater Level Simulation platform. The live-fire segment of the exercises will take place from July 9 to 18.

The drills aim to simulate scenarios where Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) exercises escalate into an attack on Taiwan, according to Major General Tung Chi-hsing, director of the Ministry of National Defense's joint operations planning division.

The Han Kuang exercises would also replicate PLA "gray zone" activities, which are provocative or aggressive actions that stop short of open conflict, Tung explained at a news conference on Wednesday, as cited by Taipei Times.

Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Wang Ting-yu stated on Friday that the public once believed China's first strike would likely be a missile attack. However, it is now more realistic to expect a first strike involving maritime militia vessels, sand dredgers, and drones--tools commonly used in "gray zone" operations.

Wang, a member of the legislature's Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee, emphasized that the military must be prepared to handle situations beyond traditional force-on-force conflicts.

This includes responding to "gray zone" activities in accordance with international law, while preventing Chinese military drills from escalating into a full-scale invasion. He noted that such complex scenarios require extensive planning and simulation, making the war games more time-consuming, Taipei Times reported.

Su Tzu-yun, director of the Division of Defense Strategy and Resources at the Institute for National Defense and Security Research, shared similar views, suggesting that this year's Han Kuang drills were extended from eight days to two weeks to allow for more scenarios involving "gray zone" tactics. (ANI)

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