Taiwan Military Resumes ‘Anti-Communist’ Classes for Graduates, Citing Chinese Threat

Taiwan Military Resumes ‘Anti-Communist’ Classes for Graduates, Citing Chinese Threat

TAIPEI, July 5 (Reuters) – Taiwan’s military has resumed “anti-communist” patriotic ⁠classes ⁠for its graduates after ⁠a quarter-century gap, the defence ministry said on Sunday, citing a ​rising threat from China as a senior official reported another rise in Chinese naval activity.

During ‌the Cold War, campaigns in ‌Taiwan warning against the dangers of the “communist bandits” in China, whose government views ⁠the island ⁠as its own territory, were widespread.

But the formal “anti-communist patriotic education” for ​military graduates ended in 2002, being renamed “patriotic education”.

Taiwan’s defence ministry said in a statement that the classes for its military academy graduates had been restored due to rising military and infiltration ​danger from China.

“It is necessary for them to clearly understand national security threats ⁠and recognise ⁠the military mission of ‘why ⁠we fight, ​and for whom we fight’,” the statement said.

China’s defence ministry did not respond to ​a request for comment ⁠outside office hours. China has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control.

Officials from departments including the China-policy-making Mainland Affairs Council, the National Security Council, the Ministry of Justice and top government think tank Academia Sinica will offer lectures ⁠to the graduates, Taiwan’s defence ministry said.

“The aim is to establish among graduates ⁠a clear awareness of friend and foe,” it added.

China’s military operates almost daily around Taiwan.

As of Friday, Taiwan was tracking a record of more than 110 Chinese military and Coast Guard ships up and down the first island chain, Joseph Wu, secretary-general of Taiwan’s National Security Council, posted on X late on Saturday.

“China’s massive maritime mobilization along the 1st Island Chain is a clear sign of its expansionism,” Wu said, referring to an area stretching ⁠from Japan to Taiwan, the Philippines and Borneo.

On Saturday, China’s Coast Guard launched a new patrol off Taiwan’s east coast, drawing a sharp response from Taipei, which says Beijing has no jurisdiction in those waters. Taiwan’s government ​rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Joe ​Cash in Beijing; Editing by William Mallard)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Reuters

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