Friday, April 26, 2024

Report Identifies 3,500 Targets China May Strike in Taiwan, Undersea Cables Most Vulnerable

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As the threat of a Communist Chinese invasion of the independent democratic island nation of grows daily, a new report identifies nearly 3,500 potential targets in Taiwan for Chinese strikes.

These potential targets included 183 tied to Taiwan's military, 341 related to transportation, 550 related to information and communications technology (ICT) and a full 2,397 linked to the government.

The report, published this week, was conducted by senior research fellows with the George Mason University's Mercatus Center. The researchers used an open-source database tied to alleged cybersecurity attacks by against Taiwan.

As Newsweek reports:

It analyzes some 294,100 Taiwan-based points of interest found by the research group New Kite Data Labs in an “unguarded” Chinese IP address that the firm Breadcrumb Cybersecurity tied to “multiple malicious cybersecurity incidents between August 2019 and October 2021 targeting the United States.”

The Mercatus Center researchers focused specifically on four categories of points of interest that would “more likely to be of military interest because those locations are strategically important and vulnerable in a kinetic conflict.”

This is how they came up with the 3,500 targets broken down above.

Newsweek adds:

“The POIs are comprehensive, and their locations are spread across Taiwan's territory, including in areas that are sparsely populated,” the report said. “The data suggest that at least one Chinese entity, possibly a government-affiliated entity, is paying close attention to a variety of economically and militarily critical locations on the island.”

Analyzing the targets more specifically, the researchers noted that military POIs include the Taiwanese navy's Haifeng Brigade, an ammunition depot in Cishan, Taiwan's Military Police Command headquarters and the Army Logistics Training Center.

Meanwhile, transportation POIs included the Taoyuan International Airport, the Taichung station of the Taiwan High Speed Rail and the Port of Kaohsiung.

ICT targets include various facilities belonging to Chunghwa Telecom and Taiwan Mobile, the headquarters of Qualcomm Taiwan Corporation and other ICT service provider offices.

Governmental targets include the National Security Bureau and, interestingly, a village government office on Orchid Island, located to the east of the Taiwan island.

However, Newsweek continues:

Among the most vulnerable and potentially consequential of these points of interest are the 15 undersea cables that provide the island with global internet access. The report identified the three landing stations in which these submarine lines reach Taiwan in the city of New Taipei surrounding the capital, the northern town of Toucheng and the southern town of Fangshan.

Bruce Jones, a former adviser to the U.S. State Department, and now director of the Brookings Institution's Project on International Order and Strategy, who reviewed the report, also warned of the vulnerability of these undersea cables. Jones told Newsweek:

The disruption to Taiwan would be far greater than the disruption to China because China has multiple other cables to every other part of the world. So, China could impose some substantial confusion and complexity in Taiwan with only a relatively modest cost to its own operations.

Jones noted that about 93% of all global data flows through undersea cables. ALN

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Paul Crespo
Paul Crespohttps://paulcrespo.com/
Paul Crespo is the Managing Editor of American Liberty Defense News. As a Marine Corps officer, he led Marines, served aboard ships in the Pacific and jumped from helicopters and airplanes. He was also a military attaché with the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) at U.S. embassies worldwide. He later ran for office, taught political science, wrote for a major newspaper and had his own radio show. A graduate of Georgetown, London and Cambridge universities, he brings decades of experience and insight to the issues that most threaten our American liberty – at home and from abroad.

3 COMMENTS

  1. So I guess if China hadn’t gotten around to making a list yet, or they only had a thousand or so sites picked out already, this could be a windfall for them, huh? Where’s the list of sites in China that Taiwan should target if China is stupid enough to attack Taiwan? Does the United States have a list of sites in China they should attack if China attacks us? Did the “patriotic” guys at George Mason U make out a list for Biden so he can show it off to the Chinese? Probably not. But I’ll bet the Chinese have one for America and just about every place else that they don’t like. Why don’t those worthless guys at colleges figure out how to get rid of the fascist squatters in Washington DC who keep doing fascist things but keep accusing everyone else of fascism? I already know the answer, it’s a rhetorical question for you to answer.

  2. Report Identifies 3,500 Targets China May Strike in Taiwam. Undersea Cables Most Vulnerable – American Liberty NewsFXXX THE CABLE. KILL CHINA’S FANCY POWER DAMS AND YOU KILL CHINA FORVER, NO FRESH WATER AS IT IS, IF CHINA GOES TO WAR THE COUNTRY WILL DIE FOREVER,THE CEMENT COUNTRY WILL BE NO MORE, MODERN CHINA LIVES IN A GLASS HOUSES, THE DAMS ARE THEIR WEAKNESS,NO DAMS NO CHINA, IT WOULD MOVE BACK INTO THE DARK AGES, MAYBE WHERE THEY BE LONG.BAD CHINA BAD CHINA THEY MUST BE BACK ON THE PIPE AGAIN.

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