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How China's balloons are contributing to Taiwan's election fears
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  • How China's balloons are contributing to Taiwan's election fears

How China's balloons are contributing to Taiwan's election fears

FP Explainers • January 8, 2024, 17:14:10 IST
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As an election in democratic Taiwan looms, Chinese balloons have appeared around the island at various times of day, raising concerns about electoral interference. It is suspected that the balloons are employed for military coercion and psychological warfare

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How China's balloons are contributing to Taiwan's election fears

China is known to play dirty, and as the election in Taiwan nears, Chinese balloons have started appearing around the island at various times of day. The Taiwan military says it is a new form of “grey zone” harassment. China has been flexes its military prowess against self-ruled Taiwan daily, sending fighter jets, reconnaissance drones and naval ships around the island. But since December, Taiwan’s defence ministry has said that mysterious balloons have crossed the narrow Taiwan Strait separating the island from China in a kind of “grey zone” harassment. Taiwan’s defence ministry said it spotted three more Chinese balloons floating over the Taiwan Strait on Sunday, one of which crossed the island. These balloons were spotted a day after Taiwan accused China of endangering aviation safety and waging psychological warfare on the island’s people before of crucial Taiwanese elections. The possibility of China using balloons for eavesdropping became a global concern in February last year when the US shot down what it claimed was a Chinese surveillance balloon. However, Beijing has since stated that the balloon was a civilian craft that had gone awry. Taiwan has reported increasing Chinese military presence and activity surrounding the island, and is on high alert ahead of Saturday’s (13 January) presidential and parliamentary elections. China’s ‘grey zone’ tactics “Grey zone” tactics are aggressive actions deployed by a state that stop short of open warfare. Experts say that is what China has been doing with its show of military force around the island. Days before a presidential election, some balloons have flown directly above Taiwan, with at least one detected around a military airbase. “Beijing is signalling that it can violate Taiwanese airspace at will and challenge its sovereignty,” said Raymond Kuo, Taiwan Policy Initiative director at RAND Corporation. Self-ruled Taiwan is claimed by China as part of its territory, with Beijing’s leadership vowing to bring the island under its control.  The 13 January election pits frontrunner Lai Ching-te — whose ruling Democratic Progressive Party says Taiwan is a sovereign nation — against two others who have pledged warmer relationships with Beijing. The timing of the balloons’ appearance is “political”, said Kuo. [caption id=“attachment_13589912” align=“alignnone” width=“640”] Taiwanese Vice President and Democratic Progressive Party presidential candidate William Lai, center, waves to supporters with legislative candidates during an election campaign at the crossroads in Taipei, Taiwan. AP[/caption] “The CCP (Chinese Communist Party) is attempting to demoralise the Taiwanese public in the run-up to next week’s presidential and legislative elections,” he told AFP. But its military purpose is “in line with broader China’s grey zone coercion strategy towards Taiwan”. “Beijing is adding yet another operational challenge to Taiwan’s defence forces, which could erode readiness and resilience,” he said.  After initially saying they were weather balloons, Taipei’s defence ministry on Saturday called them “an attempt to use cognitive warfare to affect the morale of our people”. It also said they posed a “serious threat” to aviation routes. When asked about the balloons, China’s defence ministry dismissed allegations of interference and accused Taiwan of trying to “manipulate the election”. Balloon diplomacy Balloons from China became a politically fraught topic last February, when the United States shot down what it called a spy balloon. Beijing has said it was a civilian airship blown off-course. More than 20 balloons have crossed the sensitive median line separating China from Taiwan since December, with at least seven of them passing directly over the island. Sighted during the daytime and evenings, they move at altitudes ranging from 3.6 to 11 kilometres, according to Taipei’s defence ministry. With commercial flights usually cruising between 7.3 to 12 kilometres, the balloons around Taiwan “do pose a threat and potentially cause disruption to air traffic”, said independent aviation expert Gerry Soejatman. [caption id=“attachment_13589902” align=“alignnone” width=“640”] Supporters of Taiwan’s Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) presidential candidate Ko Wen-je cheer outside of Ko’s campaign office in Xiangshan District, southwest Hsinchu City, Taiwan. AP[/caption] Weather balloons would disintegrate upon impact, but if they carry a different payload such as those seen over the United States, Soejatman said, they “pose a severe risk of damage to commercial aircraft it collides with”. Either way, they would be “a massive nuisance” for pilots, he told AFP. Calling it “irresponsible” to send the balloons at such heights, defence analyst Su Tzu-yun said the “political goal is far more than the military goal”. “They [China] want to create doubts and nervousness to go with the ‘danger of war’ sentiments in an attempt to change Taiwanese people’s attitude towards the election,” he told AFP. In 1996, Beijing conducted a series of missile tests in waters surrounding Taiwan. The tests were intended to intimidate voters from casting a ballot for then-president Lee Teng-hui, said James Char, China researcher at Singapore’s Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies. “They pushed too hard,” he said. “It actually backfired. That caused the Taiwanese to vote in favour of [a president with] non-pro-China, non-pro-unification policies.” Ivy Kwek of the International Crisis Group said “the more Beijing employs coercion on Taiwan, the less effective these actions will have on striking fear in the Taiwanese public”. “This is now an everyday scenario that Taiwanese people live with,” she said. Supporters of Lai said they were not afraid. “China often tries to intimidate Taiwan, but we Taiwanese are not easily frightened,” said a woman surnamed Zheng, 62, adding that “less clear-headed people might get scared and vote for unprincipled politicians”. One proposed just shooting them down.  “I thought it was already too much when their planes came over, and now balloons? They should have been shot down long ago,” said Chen, a retired shopowner. With inputs from AFP

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