World April 22, 2026 09:58 PM

Taiwan Coast Guard Minister Visits Itu Aba for Drills Including Armed Boarding Exercise

Rare ministerial trip to Taiwan-controlled island in contested Spratly chain underscores security focus around key shipping and resource corridor

By Nina Shah
Taiwan Coast Guard Minister Visits Itu Aba for Drills Including Armed Boarding Exercise

Taiwan’s minister responsible for maritime affairs visited Itu Aba (Taiping Island) in the South China Sea for exercises covering humanitarian relief, medical evacuation and marine pollution removal, as well as a drill in which coast guard special forces boarded a non-compliant cargo vessel. The visit was described by Taiwan’s coast guard as the first ministerial trip to the island in seven years. The island, which Taiwan controls, sits in a contested region claimed by multiple states and is lightly defended compared with nearby Chinese-held features that have undergone substantial military expansion.

Key Points

  • Taiwan’s Ocean Affairs Council minister visited Itu Aba (Taiping Island) for exercises covering humanitarian relief, medical evacuation, marine pollution removal, and a live armed-boarding drill.
  • Coast guard special forces boarded a non-responsive cargo ship, escorted it back to Taiping Island for investigation, and released footage showing personnel entering the vessel’s control room and ordering cooperation.
  • The South China Sea is an important shipping route, fishing area and potential energy reserve; the island has a runway and a 2023 wharf able to accommodate a 4,000-ton patrol ship, but is lightly defended compared with Chinese-controlled nearby features.

TAIPEI, April 23 - Taiwan’s Ocean Affairs Council minister conducted a seldom-seen visit to Itu Aba - which Taiwan refers to as Taiping Island - to observe and participate in a range of coast guard exercises, authorities said. The activities included operations typically associated with disaster response and environmental protection, alongside a live drill that simulated the armed boarding of a suspicious cargo ship.

In a statement issued late Wednesday, Taiwan’s coast guard outlined that Minister Kuan Bi-ling attended exercises described as "humanitarian relief, medical evacuation, and marine pollution removal." State media reported that this marked the first time in seven years a minister had traveled to the island, which sits in the southern reaches of the South China Sea.

Video footage released by the coast guard showed special forces personnel, wearing black tactical gear and carrying firearms, conducting a forced boarding of a cargo vessel that had failed to respond to hails. The coast guard said the team entered the ship’s control room and ordered crew cooperation, with one member telling a crewman, "You have entered the waters under the jurisdiction of our country. Please cooperate with the investigation."

According to the coast guard, the cargo ship was escorted back to Taiping Island for additional investigation "in order to safeguard the nation’s rights and national security." The depiction of the operation illustrates coastal security procedures Taiwan is willing to practice in waters it administers.

Itu Aba has infrastructure capable of supporting resupply from Taiwan, including a runway of sufficient length for military resupply flights and a new wharf completed in 2023 that can receive a 4,000-ton patrol vessel. Despite those capabilities, the island remains lightly defended relative to nearby features controlled by China, the coast guard statement and accompanying reporting noted.

Beijing has pursued extensive land reclamation and construction on South China Sea outcrops it controls, developing air and other military facilities that have raised concern in Washington and across the region. Several regional claimants, including Vietnam, the Philippines and others, also assert claims over parts of the sea. China has maintained that it has the right to build on and defend territory it regards as its own.

Taiwan also administers the Pratas Islands in the northern sector of the South China Sea. The statement noted that Chinese air and naval activity in proximity to Taiwan is a recurring element of the security environment, used by Beijing to reinforce its territorial assertions over Taiwan - a position Taipei rejects.

The South China Sea is a critical international shipping corridor that carries substantial trade and functions as an important fishing area. It is also thought to contain significant energy resources, factors that underscore why control and access in the area draw sustained attention from claimants and outside countries.


Analysis

The ministerial visit and the publicized boarding drill reflect Taiwan’s emphasis on asserting administrative control and rehearsing response options for incidents at sea. The mix of humanitarian, environmental and security training shows an approach that spans non-combatant crisis response and law-enforcement actions.

Risks

  • Heightened operational activity around disputed maritime features increases the potential for confrontations - affecting shipping operators, insurers, and regional trade flows.
  • The contrast between Taiwan’s limited defenses on Itu Aba and extensive Chinese military construction on nearby islets may raise security uncertainties - with implications for defense procurement and regional naval postures.
  • Regular air and naval activity by China near Taiwan and contested areas sustains geopolitical risk for energy exploration and fishing industries operating in the South China Sea.

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