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Taiwan reports surge of Chinese military aircraft, ships operating close by

Taiwan's defence ministry reported a rise of Chinese military activity around the island on Tuesday, including 47 military airplane, with Taiwan on high alert following the return of its president from a U.S. journey.

China, which sees democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, had been anticipated to release drills to reveal its anger at President Lai Ching-te's tour of the Pacific that ended on Friday, which included stopovers in Hawaii and the U.S. territory of Guam.

Taiwan's military raised its alert level on Monday after stating China had actually booked airspace and deployed marine and coast guard vessels. China's military has yet to comment and has not confirmed it is carrying out any exercises.

On Tuesday, Taiwan's defence ministry stated it discovered 47 military aircraft running around the island over the past 24 hours, in addition to 12 navy vessels and 9 main ships, which describes vessels from ostensibly civilian agencies such as the coast guard.

Of the aircraft, 26 flew in an area to the north of Taiwan off the coast of China's Zhejiang province, 6 in the Taiwan Strait and a further 15 to the island's southwest, according to a map the ministry supplied in its daily morning declaration on Chinese activities.

A senior Taiwan security source informed Reuters that the Chinese aircraft simulated attacks on foreign naval ships and practiced driving away military and civilian airplane as part of a blockade exercise.

Lai and his federal government turn down Beijing's sovereignty claims, saying only Taiwan's individuals can choose their future.

China says the Taiwan issue is the core of its core interests and a red line the United States must not cross.

China has held 2 rounds of significant war games around Taiwan up until now this year.

(source: Reuters)