| PLA chief ‘lying 
through his teeth,’ legislator says
 By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff Reporter
 
 Taiwanese military and intelligence officers yesterday rejected claims by 
People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Chief of General Staff Chen Bingde (陳炳德) that 
China did not have ballistic missiles targeting Taiwan in areas along the coast, 
adding that the missile threat facing Taiwan was increasing rather than 
decreasing.
 
 “What the PLA [chief] said is far from the truth,” Minister of National Defense 
Kao Hua-chu (高華柱) told the legislature in response to claims by Chen, who is 
currently visiting the US as part of efforts to improve military ties with 
Washington.
 
 What is deployed along China’s coast is mainly anti-aircraft artillery, while 
ballistic missiles are away from the coast and under cover, but within range of 
Taiwan, Kao said.
 
 National Security Bureau (NSB) Director Tsai Der-sheng (蔡得勝), who was also 
present at the meeting, said the number of ballistic missiles China has aimed at 
Taiwan continues to rise.
 
 Beijing has not changed its longstanding position on the possible use of force 
to prevent Taiwan from declaring de jure independence and has refused to 
renounce that possibility to improve cross-strait relations, Tsai said.
 
 “China is in no position to say whether the deployment of its ballistic missiles 
against Taiwan is a threat to Taiwanese,” Tsai said. “It’s how [we] feel about 
that. I don’t think any country in the world agrees that the missiles are not a 
threat to Taiwan.”
 
 Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Lin Yu-fang (林郁方) said the general 
was “lying through his teeth.”
 
 The Pentagon and Taiwan estimate that 1,400 ballistic missiles targeting Taiwan 
are deployed in Yongan, Fujian Province, Leping, Jiangxi Province, and Meizhou, 
Guangdong Province, Lin said.
 
 Experts on the Chinese military put the total number of short and medium-range 
ballistic missiles and cruise missiles targeting Taiwan at close to 1,900. As 
part of modernization efforts, older missiles have been replaced by more 
advanced and more accurate ones, and several now have longer ranges, faster 
re-entry speeds and countermeasures against the missile defense systems deployed 
by Taiwan.
 
 Asked to assess the possibility of the US Congress rescinding the Taiwan 
Relations Act (TRA), as suggested by Chen, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs 
Thomas Hou (侯平福) said: “It would not be that easy, although some members of 
Congress, the Senate and the House support the move.”
 
 “However, the majority of members of the Senate and the House support the TRA,” 
Hou said.
 
 Additional reporting by staff writer
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