Taiwan — Taiwan is not expecting an attack from China anytime soon, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t preparing for one.
The self-ruling democracy about 100 miles off the coast of China has been strengthening its defenses in the face of growing threats from Beijing, which claims the island as its territory. Though China says it seeks “peaceful unification,” it has not ruled out the use of force against the island, which rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims.
“We are trying very hard to keep our rights here,” First Lieutenant Kai-Lin Chiang, 24, told NBC News during a visit to 7th Wing Airforce Base in Taitung, a city on the southeast coast.
Chiang said it was an “honor” to be a pilot for Taiwan and that he was focused on becoming as skilled in the air as possible.
Though he thinks about the possibility of going to war “almost every day,” said Chiang, who graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado in 2021, “the only thing I can do is prepare myself and be stronger.”
Trainee pilots like Chiang spend a year learning how to fly before they go to another base for three years of training in combat flying, after which they become full-fledged pilots. Many of them hope to one day fly the F-16 fighter jets sold to Taiwan by the United States, the island’s most important international backer.
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