US Hyping Up Threat Of Taiwan Invasion, Says Beijing

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2021-03-10 HKT 17:27

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  • Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian says some Americans 'continue to use the Taiwan issue to hype up China's military threat'. File photo: AFP

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian says some Americans 'continue to use the Taiwan issue to hype up China's military threat'. File photo: AFP

Beijing on Wednesday accused a top US commander of attempting to "hype up" the threat of an invasion of Taiwan to inflate Washington's defence spend and justify its own military chicanery in Asia.

The US' top military officer in Asia-Pacific, Admiral Philip Davidson, on Tuesday said the mainland could invade Taiwan within the next six years, as Beijing accelerates its moves to supplant American military power in Asia.

"I worry that they're (China) accelerating their ambitions to supplant the United States and our leadership role in the rules-based international order ... by 2050," Davidson said.

"Taiwan is clearly one of their ambitions before that. And I think the threat is manifest during this decade, in fact, in the next six years," he told a US Senate committee.

Beijing was swift to bat away the admiral's comments.

"Some US people continue to use the Taiwan issue to hype up China's military threat," foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing.

"But in essence this is the US searching for a pretext to increase its military spending, expand its forces and interfere in regional affairs."

China also has made expansive territorial claims in the resource-rich South China Sea and even threatens the American island of Guam, Davidson had stressed.

"Guam is a target today," he warned, recalling that the Chinese military released a video simulating an attack on an island base strongly resembling US facilities in Diego Garcia and Guam.

He called on lawmakers to approve the installation on Guam of an Aegis Ashore anti-missile battery, capable of intercepting the most powerful Chinese missiles.

Guam "needs to be defended and it needs to be prepared for the threats that will come in the future," Davidson said.

In addition to other Aegis missile defence systems destined for Australia and Japan, Davidson called on lawmakers to budget for offensive armaments "to let China know that the costs of what they seek to do are too high." (AFP)

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