From AFT:
“China vows no concessions on
Taiwan after Biden comments about defending island”
China on Friday said there is “no
room” for compromise or concessions over the issue of Taiwan, following a
comment by U.S. President Joe Biden that the U.S. is committed to defending the
island if it is attacked. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin reasserted
China’s longstanding claim that the island is its territory at a daily briefing
after Biden made his comment a day before at a forum hosted by CNN. China has
recently upped its threat to bring Taiwan under its control by force if
necessary by flying warplanes near the island and rehearsing beach landings. “When
it comes to issues related to China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and
other core interests, there is no room for China to compromise or make
concessions, and no one should underestimate the strong determination, firm
will and strong ability of the Chinese people to defend national sovereignty
and territorial integrity,” Wang said. “Taiwan is an inalienable part of
China’s territory. The Taiwan issue is purely an internal affair of China that
allows no foreign intervention,” Wang said. Biden’s comments on Thursday were
viewed as stretching the “strategic ambiguity” Washington has maintained over
how it would respond to an assault on the self-governing island republic. The
U.S. should “be cautious with its words and actions on the Taiwan issue, and
not send any wrong signals to the separatist forces of Taiwan independence, so
as not to seriously damage China-U.S. relations and peace and stability in the
Taiwan Strait,” Wang said.
What war with China could look
like A host of scenarios could push China and the United States into some
kind of conflict. In his comments, Biden said the U.S. did not want a new Cold
War but expressed concern about whether China was “going to engage in
activities that will put them in a position where they may make a serious
mistake.” “I just want to make China understand that we are not going to step
back, we are not going to change any of our views.” Biden said. Asked whether
the U.S. would come to Taiwan’s defense if it were attacked, he replied: “Yes,
we have a commitment to do that.” Asked Friday whether the U.S. would defend
Taiwan if the island were attacked by China, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin told a reporter he would not discuss hypothetical situations, but also
said, “Nobody wants to see cross-Strait issues come to blows -– certainly not
President Biden, and there’s no reason that it should.” Speaking in Brussels
after a NATO defense ministers’ meeting, Austin added that Washington remains
committed to its longstanding “one China” policy. In Taipei, a spokesperson for
independence-minded President Tsai Ing-wen said the U.S. has shown its support
for Taiwan through concrete actions and the island’s 23 million citizens would
not surrender to pressure or act rashly. “Taiwan will demonstrate our firm
determination to defend ourselves and continue to work with countries with
similar values to make a positive contribution toward the Taiwan Strait and
Indo-Pacific region’s peace and stability,” spokesperson Chang Tun-han said.
China and Taiwan split during a civil war in 1949. The U.S. cut formal diplomatic relations with Taipei in 1979 in order to recognize Beijing. The U.S. does not openly contest China’s claim to Taiwan, but is committed by law to ensure the island can defend itself and to treat all threats toward it as matters of “grave concern.” Under President Xi Jinping, who is also Communist Party leader and head of the armed forces, China has been stepping up military, diplomatic and economic pressure on Taiwan. Over its National Day weekend at the beginning of the month, China sent a record 149 military aircraft southwest of Taiwan in strike group formations, prompting Taiwan to scramble aircraft and activate its air defense missile systems.
On its current trajectory, U.S.
planners should expect greater military cooperation on a global level between
Beijing and Moscow. China has also recently held beach landing exercises on its
side of the roughly 160-kilometer (100-mile) -wide Taiwan Strait that, like the
aircraft incursions, it described as a warning to Tsai’s administration. The
U.S. has reinforced its support for Taiwan with military sales. State
Department spokesman Ned Price said this month that American support for Taiwan
is “rock solid.” The U.S. has “also been very clear that we are committed to
deepening our ties with Taiwan,” Price said. On Wednesday, Biden’s pick for
ambassador to Beijing, Nicholas Burns, told lawmakers considering his
nomination that Americans should “have confidence in our strength” when dealing
with the rise of China, a nation he said the U.S. and its allies could manage. Burns
echoed the Biden administration’s stand on cooperating with China where
possible but condemning many of its actions, including its policies toward
Taiwan and the semi-autonomous territory of Hong Kong, where it has virtually
eliminated dissident voices through stiff legislation and arrests.
^ China is clearly trying to
destabilize Asia and the world with its random words and actions against Taiwan.
Maybe the Communist Dictatorship there is trying to focus the attention of its
citizens away from their mishandling of Covid and the ever-increasing threat of
bankruptcies and other economical problems. The US (and the rest of the world) needs
to stand-up to China and stop them from threatening to invade or actually invading
Taiwan. Taiwan is an independent country and has been since the Communists took
over the mainland in 1949. ^
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