US assessment raises concerns over China attacking Taiwan
WASHINGTON — Amid increasing tensions with Beijing, the Pentagon has released a new report that lays out U.S. concerns about China’s growing military might, underscoring worries about a possible attack against Taiwan.
Speaking to reporters, a senior defence intelligence official said Tuesday that the key concern is that as China upgrades its military equipment and technology and reforms how it trains and develops troops, it becomes more confident in its ability to wage a regional conflict. And Beijing’s leaders have made it clear that reasserting sovereignty over Taiwan is a top priority.
The official added, however, that although China could easily fire missiles at Taiwan, it doesn’t yet have the military capability to successfully invade the self-governing island, which split from mainland China amid civil war in 1949. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in order to provide more detail on intelligence findings in the report, which was written by the Defence Intelligence Agency.
A Chinese government spokeswoman said the report “is full of Cold War ideology and zero-sum game thinking” and suggested the U.S. was making excuses to strengthen or develop its own weapons of mass destruction.