BEIJING
(Reuters) --- China's
Foreign Ministry expressed anger on Thursday after two U.S. fighter jets landed in Taiwan, in a rare official contact between the
militaries of the United
States and the self-ruled democratic island.
Taiwan's Central News Agency said the two F-18s
landed at an air force base in southern Taiwan on Wednesday after
experiencing mechanical problems. It said it was not clear where they were
coming from or where they were going.
"While this
landing was unplanned and occurred exclusively out of mechanical necessity, it
reflects well on Taiwan
that they permitted pilots in distress to land safely," said U.S. Pentagon
spokeswoman Henrietta Levin.
China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Hua
Chunying, told a regular news briefing: "We have already made solemn
representations to the U.S.
side."
"China demands
that the United States strictly abide by the 'one-China policy' ... and
cautiously and appropriately handle this incident."
The United States is obligated to help Taiwan defend itself under the Taiwan Relations
Act of 1979, when Washington severed formal
ties with the island to recognize the People's Republic of China in Beijing.
U.S. weapons sales in recent years to Taiwan, or indeed any formal contact between the
two armed forces, have provoked strong condemnation by China, but have not caused lasting damage to Beijing's relations with either Washington
or Taipei.
China views Taiwan as a renegade province and
has not ruled out the use of force to bring it under its control.
While Taiwan and China
have signed a series of landmark trade and economic agreements since 2008,
political and military suspicions still run deep, especially in democratic Taiwan, where many fear China's true
intentions.
China's
military modernization has also been accompanied by a more assertive posture in
its regional territorial disputes.
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