# The Silence Over the Strait: China's Unprecedented Halt in Taiwan Air Operations > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/world/the-silence-over-the-strait-chinas-unprecedented-halt-in-taiwan-air-operations) > Author: Aaron > Date: 2026-03-06 For seven consecutive days, the sky between China and Taiwan has been empty. No People's Liberation Army fighters cutting across Taiwan's Air Defense Identification Zone. No daily tallies from Taipei's Ministry of Defense listing the usual formations of J-16s, H-6 bombers, or electronic warfare aircraft. No calibrated escalations, no incremental signaling. Just absence. This marks the longest pause in PLA air incursions since Taiwan began regularly disclosing the activity in 2020 -- a disclosure regime that itself became part of the psychological battlefield between Beijing and Taipei. For years, the rhythm of these flights was predictable. Some days were routine pressure. Others were conspicuously large, tied to U.S. visits, elections, or geopolitical friction. But the pattern itself was the point: presence equals leverage. And now, silence. **The Scale of What Stopped** ```chart {"type":"bar","data":[{"year":"2020","incursions":380},{"year":"2021","incursions":969},{"year":"2022","incursions":1737},{"year":"2023","incursions":1709},{"year":"2024","incursions":3075},{"year":"2025","incursions":3764},{"year":"2026 (YTD)","incursions":580}],"xKey":"year","yKeys":["incursions"]} ``` From 380 tracked incursions in 2020 to 3,764 in 2025 -- a tenfold increase in five years. According to CSIS's China Power Project, 2025 saw a 22.4% increase over 2024's already-record 3,075 incursions. The monthly pattern shows the anomaly in stark relief: ```chart {"type":"line","data":[{"month":"Jan 2025","incursions":298},{"month":"Feb 2025","incursions":285},{"month":"Mar 2025","incursions":312},{"month":"Apr 2025","incursions":295},{"month":"May 2025","incursions":340},{"month":"Jun 2025","incursions":318},{"month":"Jul 2025","incursions":325},{"month":"Aug 2025","incursions":352},{"month":"Sep 2025","incursions":308},{"month":"Oct 2025","incursions":315},{"month":"Nov 2025","incursions":298},{"month":"Dec 2025","incursions":318},{"month":"Jan 2026","incursions":305},{"month":"Feb 2026","incursions":275},{"month":"Mar 2026","incursions":0}],"xKey":"month","yKeys":["incursions"]} ``` For fifteen consecutive months, PLA aircraft entered Taiwan's ADIZ at a rate of 275-350 sorties per month. Then March 2026: zero. This isn't a gradual de-escalation. It's a cliff. **Why Now? The Trump-Xi Factor** Reuters and the South China Morning Post both point to a looming Trump-Xi summit as the most likely explanation. Beijing may be creating diplomatic space -- a temporary reduction in visible military pressure to set conditions for high-level engagement. This interpretation aligns with historical patterns. China has occasionally modulated Taiwan Strait activity around major diplomatic moments, though rarely with this level of abruptness or duration. But the summit theory has limits. Previous diplomatic overtures didn't require a complete halt. Beijing has demonstrated it can calibrate -- reducing frequency or scale without going to zero. The totality of this pause suggests something more deliberate. **The Function of Routine Aggression** Since 2020, China's near-daily flights into Taiwan's ADIZ have served multiple purposes: **Normalization**: They made military pressure part of the background noise of cross-strait relations. Markets stopped reacting. Headlines became routine. **Attrition**: Taiwan's air force must scramble to monitor and respond. Each incursion imposes cost -- fuel, maintenance, pilot fatigue. Over years, this compounds. **Intelligence**: Every flight provides data on Taiwan's response times, radar coverage, and coordination with allies. **Narrative**: Domestically and internationally, the flights built a story that the Taiwan Strait is contested space -- not stable, not neutral, not settled. The flights became infrastructure. Stopping is not de-escalation by default. It's disruption. **Three Readings of the Pause** **Diplomatic signaling**: Beijing wants to communicate openness to dialogue without appearing to concede. A temporary halt offers optionality -- you can always resume tomorrow. **Strategic repositioning**: Pressure may be shifting to less visible domains -- cyber operations, economic coercion, maritime activity, or diplomatic maneuvers elsewhere in the region. **Unpredictability as strategy**: Consistent aggression becomes background noise. Change commands attention. If daily incursions no longer move markets or influence diplomacy, the next move isn't necessarily escalation -- it's breaking the pattern. **Taiwan's Position** For Taipei, the pause offers temporary operational relief. Fewer scrambles mean reduced wear on aircraft and pilots. But relief does not equal reassurance. Taiwan's Ministry of Defense tracks the ADIZ closely, understanding the distinction between that zone and sovereign airspace. The ADIZ is a buffer -- legally ambiguous, strategically sensitive, psychologically potent. Military planners must now consider whether the pattern has fundamentally changed -- and what that implies for force posture, readiness cycles, and alliance coordination. **The Systemic Stakes** The Taiwan Strait has evolved from a regional flashpoint into a systemic hinge. Semiconductor supply chains, U.S.-Japan security coordination, Philippine basing agreements, and Chinese naval expansion all intersect here. In this environment, small shifts in behavior carry disproportionate meaning. As we noted in our analysis of [copper's emergence as the critical AI infrastructure metal](https://adin.chat/world/rotating-from-gold-silver-into-copper-an-ai-driven), defense modernization and geopolitical strain are reshaping commodity markets and strategic calculations alike. China's decision to halt flights for seven days -- after five years of relentless escalation -- is a reminder that strategic competition is not a straight line. It is rhythm. Pressure and release. Escalation and quiet. The question isn't whether flights will resume. It's what happens when they do -- and how that restart is framed. Because in geopolitics, silence is rarely empty. It is often the most intentional move on the board. **Sources** - Bloomberg, "China Halts PLA Flights Near Taiwan in Longest Pause Since Disclosures Began" (March 6, 2026) - Reuters, "Chinese military flights around Taiwan fall, Trump-Xi meeting may be factor" (March 5, 2026) - South China Morning Post, "Is looming Xi-Trump summit behind the PLA's break in air sorties near Taiwan?" (March 2026) - Taiwan News, "China halts military flights around Taiwan for 6 days" (March 6, 2026) - CSIS China Power Project, PLA ADIZ incursion data (2025) - Foreign Policy Research Institute, "Breaking the Barrier: Four Years of PRC Military Activity Around Taiwan" (October 2024) - Jamestown Foundation, "Military Implications of PLA Aircraft Incursions in Taiwan's Airspace 2024" - 19FortyFive, "3,100 'Incidents': China's Military Tripled ADIZ Violations Near Taiwan" (February 2025)