Nancy Pelosi’s Flight to Taiwan Becomes Most Tracked Flight on Flightradar24

Three hundred thousand individuals are following an Air Force Boeing C-40C to locate Nancy Pelosi's trip to Taiwan.

300k Individuals are Tracking Nancy Pelosi's Flight

To monitor US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as she travels to Taiwan, online users are now following a US Air Force flight that took off from Kuala Lumpur.

According to FlightRadar24, "SPAR19," a US Air Force-operated Boeing C-40C, is tracked by almost 300,000 individuals. According to a previous report from Taiwan's Liberty Times newspaper, Pelosi is scheduled to land at Songshan airport in Taipei, which also serves as a military installation, around 10:20 pm ET (August 2) local time.

Thousands of people watch exciting planes on the well-known airplane-tracking website FlightRadar24, including those involved in emergencies or first flights.

At 3:40 pm ET, the SPAR19 aircraft departed from Kuala Lumpur's Subang Airport. Instead, they went east toward Borneo island, passing by the Indonesian city of Manado before turning north toward the Philippines while avoiding the South China Sea.

Pelosi and her staff have withheld information on her trip to Taiwan due to security procedures. When Newsweek contacted Taiwan's Foreign Ministry, it said it was unaware of any facts. The scheduled trip to Taiwan by Pelosi has not yet received official confirmation.

There is no formal statement confirming Pelosi's presence on the aircraft. Beijing, which considers the island its property and has threatened repercussions if the trip proceeds, is furious over her prospective trip to Taiwan.

A spokeswoman said that the US Air Force fighter was one of FlightRadar24's five most-tracked aircraft. Alexey Navalny's alleged poisoning attempt was monitored by 550,000 people when he returned to Russia for treatment.

Petchenik said the flight monitoring agency is expanding resources due to "quite severe demand" from online aircraft spotting. Tuesday's website and app interruptions weren't intentional.

Nancy Pelosi's Visit to the Biggest Semiconductor Plant Globally

By a vote of 64 to 33, the Senate adopted the CHIPS and Science Act, a strategy to support and promote domestic semiconductor production.

The plan includes $52 billion for US semiconductor manufacturing businesses, tax breaks for manufacturing investments, and more funding for ongoing technical growth.

In line with this, the American Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, is planning a trip to Taiwan in August, the world's largest manufacturer of semiconductors and the source of the vast bulk of the nation's chips. The independent island produces 92% of the most advanced electronics on the planet, including the chipsets that power iPhones and the majority of American technology.

In a news conference on July 25, Zhao Lijian, a spokeswoman for the Chinese foreign ministry, revealed that Beijing had cautioned American authorities about Pelosi's prospective travel. Speaker Pelosi may visit Taiwan, and the Chinese side has frequently expressed to the US side its significant concern and steadfast opposition to the trip, Zhao said.

The trip to Taiwan by Pelosi would be the most widely covered in recent memory. Beijing has undertaken military exercises close to Taipei to thwart American attempts to deepen their political alliance. If Taiwan proclaimed independence, there would be bloodshed.

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