Chinese Navy Deployment Near Taiwan Raises Concerns Over Potential Amphibious Invasion
Recently, a Chinese flotilla including ships designed to project power ashore has been spotted operating off the coasts of Taiwan’s south-east and southwest. The activity raises concerns over China‘s intentions toward the island.
Its Geopolitical Importance
People’s Republic of China claims Taiwan, even though it has never been ruled by the PRC. Beijing has maintained that it “reserves all options” – a stance that includes the potential use of force – against Taiwan, which maintains a security partnership with the United States. Reports claiming that China is actively preparing an amphibious assault on Taiwan have intensified these fears. Last year, the commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific force, Admiral Samuel Paparo referred to what he described the biggest invasion rehearsal that the Chinese military had conducted around Taiwan in his time.
Naval Deployment: Details
Satellite images from Tuesday showed a Chinese Naval Task Force positioned about 134 nautical Miles southeast of Taiwan. The flotilla consisted of:
- The two Type 052D modern multirole destroyers.
- The Type 075 is an amphibious assault vessel capable of landing both troops and vehicles.
- A Type 071 amphibian transport dock designed to deploy and carry troops.
- Supporting naval operations with a Type 903 replenishment ships.
2/25,恆春東北東250km處海域發現075安徽艦編隊,以西約31km處發現台灣海軍編隊,成員有基隆級驅逐艦*1、成功級巡防艦*2。
Copernicus瀏覽器的Sentinel-2衛星的ture color解析度,我目測只有15m左右,記得選highlight optimized natural color改善。 https://t.co/WzgJRHfne6 pic.twitter.com/5M54qtMyFD— August (@August20190831) February 26, 2025
The Taiwanese army reported, adding to tensions, that China had set up a zone for live-fire exercises approximately 40 nautical mile off Taiwan’s south coast. This was done without any prior notice. The zone is outside Taiwan’s 12 nautical-mile territorial water, but it demonstrates China’s aggressive military posture.
A map published by Taiwan’s military shows that seven Chinese warships are operating in the drill zone. CNS was one of them Siming Shan Taiwanese forces released video footage that confirmed the Type 071 amphibian warship (hull 986). This is the Siming ShanIn mid-February, six Chinese warships and a suspected laser-equipped ship had transited the East China Sea towards the Philippine Sea in the vicinity of Japan’s southwest islands.
First images: Taiwanese Pan Chao (PFG2-1108), a frigate, monitors PLAN Siming Shan type 071 LPD (986) and Qiandaohu type 903 replenishment vessel (886).
Unknown exact location but somewhere around the SW corner of Taiwan ADIZ.
Taiwan was monitoring the ships until about 1540… pic.twitter.com/66uzrh0XUZ
— Jaime Ocon 歐海美 (@JaimeOcon1) February 26, 2025
Marco Rubio (U.S. Secretary Of State) reaffirmed Washington’s current commitments to stop the Chinese taking over Taiwan. China, Rubio said, is fully aware of Washington’s previous commitments.
The Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 mandates the U.S. providing Taiwan with defensive weapons, and resisting any attempt to solve cross-strait conflicts through non-peaceful methods.

The International Responses and Reactions
Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry released a press release that emphasized: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is also calling for the international community, to be vigilant about the safety of the Taiwan Strait region and China’s unilateral and repeated actions which undermine regional stability.
U.S. secretary of state Marco Rubio U.S. policy on Taiwan was stated as follows: “We do not support any change to Taiwan’s legal status that would be forced, compelled or coerced.” This has been the U.S. position on Taiwan since late 1970s. It will not change.
The Future
It is uncertain whether or not the Chinese amphibian warship led flotilla, which will be navigating through the Taiwan Strait to circumnavigate Taiwan in the immediate future. A move like this would only escalate tensions further and strain relations between the two straits, affecting regional peace.