China Launches Massive War Games around Taiwan

Rockets, ships, and aircraft simulate blockade amid rising tensions

Tue Dec 30 2025
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TAIPEI, BEIJING: China fired rockets toward Taiwan on Tuesday and deployed new amphibious assault ships alongside bomber aircraft and warships to encircle the island on the second day of its most extensive war games aimed at rehearsing a blockade.

The Eastern Theatre Command said live-firing would take place until 6 p.m. (1000 GMT) in the sea and airspace of five locations surrounding Taiwan and off the Chinese coast, while naval and air force units drilled strikes on maritime and aerial targets as well as anti-submarine operations to the democratically governed island’s north and south.

Named “Justice Mission 2025”, the drills began 11 days after the U.S. announced a record $11.1 billion arms package to Taiwan and are Beijing’s largest exercises to date by total coverage and proximity to the island, following China’s Maritime Safety Administration on Monday adding two additional live-fire zones, according to Reuters.

According to a senior Taiwan security official, Taipei is watching whether this sixth major round of war games since 2022, when then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited the island, will also see China fire missiles over Taiwan, as it did then.

Beijing also looks to be using the exercises to practise striking land-based targets such as the U.S.-made HIMARS rocket system, the source said, a highly mobile artillery system with a range of about 300 km (186 miles) that could hit coastal targets in southern China.

Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te said in a post on Facebook that China’s exercises were “inconsistent with the conduct expected of a responsible major power”. Frontline troops were primed to defend the island, but Taipei did not seek to escalate the situation, he added.

The island’s defence ministry confirmed live-firing drills had taken place to Taiwan’s north on Tuesday morning, and debris had entered its contiguous zone, defined as 24 nautical miles offshore. Reuters was not immediately able to verify whether China also launched rockets in the other zones it had demarcated for the exercises.

Taiwan sits alongside key commercial shipping and aviation routes, with some $2.45 trillion in trade moving through the Taiwan Strait each year and the airspace above the island a conduit between China, the world’s second-largest economy, and the fast-growing markets of East and Southeast Asia.

While 11 of Taipei’s 14 flight routes have been affected by the drills, according to Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Authority, disruption to international flights appears to be minimal. Li Hanming, a U.S.-based aviation analyst, said commercial carriers were making heavy use of two air corridors heading out to the island’s northeast heading towards Japan.

Fourteen Chinese coastguard vessels continued to sail around Taiwan’s contiguous zone on Tuesday, some of which were engaged in standoffs with Taiwanese vessels, a Taiwan coast guard official told Reuters.

“We adopted a one-to-one parallel navigation approach, closely shadowing each other’s routes,” the official said, adding that Taiwan had also employed “wave-making and manoeuvring techniques” to force the Chinese vessels to retreat.

The defence ministry said 130 Chinese military aircraft and 22 navy and coastguard vessels had been operating around the island in the 24 hours up to 6:00 a.m.

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