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China launches patrols in the Taiwan Strait, orders inspections of ships as Taiwan says it will not comply

China has ordered inspections for ships in the Taiwan Strait, but Taiwan's maritime authority has instructed ships to ignore the order and contact the coast guard if approached.

The Chinese government announced a three-day series of patrols in the Taiwan Strait on Thursday, ordering that any ships in the area stop for inspection or even boarding.

Taiwan's maritime authority rejected the order, filing a complaint with Chinese authorities, and has urged its shipping companies to ignore such inspection orders and notify the Taiwanese coast guard immediately should it receive one.

"If the mainland side insists on taking one-sided actions, it will create obstacles to normal exchanges between the two sides. We will be forced to take corresponding measures," Taiwanese authorities wrote in a statement.

The areas impacted by China's inspection order could impact passenger and fishing vessels as well as commercial and shipping vessels.

CHINA VOWS 'STRONG' MEASURES AFTER MCCARTHY MEETS TAIWAN'S TSAI ING-WEN

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Mike McCaul was asked about China's threat to stop Taiwanese ships on Wednesday, saying he was aware of Chinese naval forces surrounding the island.

"[Intimidation is] what they do," McCaul, R-Texas, told Fox News' Aishah Hasnie. "And we're not going to be deterred by this intimidation if the PRC, communist China, decides to start blocking the Taiwan Straits, that is an act of aggression. And I believe it's not it is not sustainable or acceptable."

"I do know that there are three aircraft carriers surrounding the island right now, and we know that they are they have certain plans, whether they carry those out. I don't know. But I think that would be a very unfortunate mistake on the part of the Chinese Communist Party," he continued, adding that he could not confirm what the Chinese plans were.

The Chinese escalation comes one day after Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen met with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in California. China had vowed to take "strong" measures if the two leaders went through with the meeting.

"We will take resolute measures to punish the ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist forces and their actions, and resolutely safeguard our country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity," China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said in a statement Thursday morning.

PELOSI PRAISES MCCARTHY'S 'LEADERSHIP' AFTER TAIWAN MEETING

McCarthy and Tsai each gave carefully-worded statements during their meeting at the Reagan Library in Southern California. The pair spoke highly of the relationship between "the people" of Taiwan and the U.S. The language seeks to avoid complications arising from the Taiwan Relations Act, which stipulates that Taiwan and the U.S. cannot have formal diplomatic relations.

"America’s support for the people of Taiwan will remain resolute, unwavering and bipartisan," McCarthy said at a news conference.

Taiwan split from mainland China in 1949 after pro-democratic forces based there lost a civil war to the Chinese Communist Party.

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