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An Unprecedented Show of Force

The “Justice Mission 2025” exercises were unlike anything China had organized before. Over two days, December 29 and 30, Chinese forces deployed nearly 130 aircraft, including J-20, J-16, and J-10 fighters, bombers, and drones. At sea, at least 14 warships and 14 coast guard cutters surrounded the island. For the first time since 2022, rockets were fired into the strait, with some landing near the 24-nautical-mile line. The exercises explicitly simulated a blockade of the strategic ports of Keelung and Kaohsiung—Taiwan’s economic lifelines. These maneuvers come after the announcement of an $11.1 billion U.S. arms sale to Taipei, which provoked Beijing’s fury.

What sets Justice Mission 2025 apart is the proximity of the operational zones. Seven live-fire zones formed a nearly complete ring around the island, with some encroaching on Taiwanese territorial waters. More than 6,000 travelers were affected, with 76 domestic flights canceled and 300 international flights potentially delayed. Taipei detected 89 military aircraft in the surrounding skies, 67 of which entered its response zone. Defense Minister Wellington Koo condemned these “highly provocative actions” that “seriously undermine regional peace.”

An Unprecedented Operational Paradigm

Military analysts describe this as a major doctrinal shift: Beijing is now testing its ability to operate in the immediate vicinity of the island, compressing Taipei’s reaction times. Chinese strategists call this “system-destruction warfare”—weaponizing geography, time, and sensory dominance to paralyze the adversary before the first shots are fired. Colonel Shi Yi, spokesperson for the Eastern Theater Command, described these exercises as a “stern warning against separatist forces advocating for Taiwan’s independence” and, in a new development, against “external intervention forces”—a direct message to Washington and Tokyo.

There is something deeply unsettling about the normalization of these exercises. Every year, Chinese maneuvers move closer to Taiwan, last longer, and involve more equipment. And the world is getting used to it. This is exactly what Beijing is seeking: to blur the line between peacetime and wartime, ensuring that when the encirclement turns into an actual blockade, no one will be able to say exactly when the line was crossed.

Sources

Primary Sources

South China Morning Post – “Did a PLA stealth fighter approach a key Taiwan airbase? New video sparks debate” – January 2, 2026. EurAsian Times – “China’s J-20 Flies ‘Undetected’ Over Taiwan Again, PLAAF Claims” – January 3, 2026. CNN – “China stages war games around Taiwan after hitting out at major US arms deal” – December 30, 2025. Wikipedia – “Justice Mission 2025” – accessed January 3, 2026.

Secondary Sources

Interesting Engineering – “China’s stealth fighter jet approached key Taiwanese airbase without detection” – January 2, 2026. Defense Security Asia – “PLA’s J-20 Stealth Fighter Flies Within Visual Range of Taiwan” – December 31, 2025. The Aviationist – “China Conducts ‘Justice Mission 2025’ Exercise Around Taiwan ” – December 31, 2025. Focus Taiwan – “China’s live-fire drill around Taiwan ‘unilateral provocation’” – December 29, 2025. The War Zone – “China’s New Tailless Stealth Fighters Both Appear At Secretive Test Base” – November 4, 2025. National Interest – “How Good a Fighter Plane Is China’s J-20 Mighty Dragon?” – September 19, 2025. CBS News – “U.S. says China’s military activities near Taiwan ‘increase tensions unnecessarily’” – December 31, 2025.

This content was created with the help of AI.

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