BFF-38 Taiwan unveils new drone as China tensions mount

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TAIWAN-CHINA-DEFENCE-MILITARY-DRONE

Taiwan unveils new drone as China tensions mount

PINGTUNG, Taiwan, Jan 24, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Taiwan’s navy showed off its
latest long-range surveillance drone Thursday as the island’s outgunned armed
forces push to counter China’s increasingly muscular rhetoric and military
exercises.

China still sees Taiwan as part of its territory to be reunified, despite
the two sides being ruled separately since they split in 1949 after a civil
war.

Beijing has said it will not hesitate to use force if Taipei formally
declares independence, or in the case of external intervention — including
by the United States, the island’s most powerful unofficial ally.

The already terse relationship between the two sides got off to an even
rockier start in the new year after Chinese President Xi Jinping gave a
landmark speech describing the island’s unification with the mainland as
“inevitable”.

Taiwan’s president Tsai Ing-wen hit back saying her people would never
relinquish their democratic freedoms, an unusually robust response that saw
her receive a bump in the polls after a gruelling few months in which her
party lost heavily in local elections.

The island’s military has hosted multiple drills since Xi’s speech,
emphasising what it says is a readiness to counter any invasion.

On Thursday, the navy showed off its new, long-range surveillance drone,
the “Rui Yuan” (Sharp Hawk), which officials said can fly for 12 hours and
was now helping to monitor movements in the disputed strait between Taiwan
and China.

“The drones are now an irreplaceable part of our reconnaissance strategy,”
Taiwan defence ministry spokesman Chen Chung-chi told AFP. “They are our
primary option for activities in the strait.”

The self-ruled island has its own currency, flag and government, but is
not recognised as an independent state by the UN.

As a result, it struggles to procure key military equipment from many
major powers who are fearful of angering Beijing. Instead, it has turned to
local manufacturers, particularly for drones and missiles.

“The use of more locally-made drones demonstrates Taiwan’s defence self-
sufficiency and helps boost its reconnaissance capabilities,” Wang Kao-cheng,
a military analyst at Tamkang University, told AFP.

Taiwan’s American F-16 and ageing French-made Mirage fighter jets are
being increasingly called upon to respond to military movements from China,
with some analysts warning the fleet is getting worn down and lacking crucial
spare parts.

Lin Ming-chang, an executive officer with Taiwan’s navy, said drones were
particularly cost-effective for surveillance.

“A pilot, when he flies, has to come back in two hours. But not the Rui-
yuan drone. We can stay up in the air for up to 12 hours,” he said.

“In operating terms, both when it comes to fuel or machine parts, the drone
can operate way longer than manned aircraft.”

The navy also unveiled a hand-launched surveillance drone on Thursday
called “The Cardinal”, which it said could stay airborne for an hour.

BSS/AFP/RY/14:47 hrs