China made its second largest incursion into Taiwan’s air defence zone this year with Taipei reporting as many as 30 jets entering the area, including more than 20 fighters.

On Monday, Taiwan’s defence ministry said it had scrambled its own aircraft and deployed air defence missile systems to monitor the latest Chinese activity.

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In recent years, Beijing has begun sending large sorties into Taiwan’s defence zone to signal dissatisfaction, and to keep Taipei’s ageing fighter fleet regularly stressed.

Meanwhile, self-ruled democratic Taiwan lives under the constant threat of invasion by China, which views the island as its territory and has vowed to one day seize it, by force if necessary.

Last week, the United States accused Beijing of raising tensions over the island, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken specifically mentioning aircraft incursions as an example of “increasingly provocative rhetoric and activity”.

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Blinken’s remarks came after US President Joe Biden appeared to break decades of US policy when in response to a question on a visit to Japan he said Washington would defend Taiwan militarily if it is attacked by China.

But the White House has since insisted its policy of “strategic ambiguity” over whether or not it would intervene has not changed.

The recent incursion was the largest since January 23, when 39 planes entered the air defence identification zone, or ADIZ.

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The ADIZ is not the same as Taiwan’s territorial airspace but includes a far greater area that overlaps with part of China’s own air defence identification zone and even includes some of the mainland.

A flight map provided by the Taiwanese defence ministry showed the planes entering the southwestern corner of the ADIZ before looping back out again.

Last year, Taiwan recorded as many as 969 incursions by Chinese warplanes into its ADIZ, according to an AFP database, more than double the roughly 380 carried out in 2020.