I don't understand how they think arming Taiwan will make China less aggressive about this? How would the US react if China had a military base in Cuba like the US has in Taiwan? Of course China is being aggressive about this, it's a threat
Also Taiwan doesn't exactly see itself as distinct form the mainland in the way the article implies. Taiwan insists that it is the real china and the mainland is their territory while the mainland believes it is the real china and Taiwan is it's territory. It's a strange situation.
China's being aggressive because Xi is throwing a tantrum over not getting what he wants. It's nothing new, nor is it anything we haven't heard before from him. I don't know why this is considered news.
Confidently said by someone who doesn't understand the Chinese governmental system. It isn't a dictatorship, not everything Xi says goes. Major decisions are discussed thoroughly by a large board before any action is taken. If Xi was making shitty childish decisions that the party saw as short sighted and foolish the party would act against him. He isn't all powerful.
When US support a genocide in the middle east under the statement "Isreal have the right to defend itself by attacking others" It is amazing that China still haven't rolled in with their military in Taiwan.
Yeah, but bought by whom? Modi's India and Meloni's Italy and Yoon Suk Yeol's Korea all want a slice. Hell, the US is overflowing with NatSec types who are eager for a loss cannon like Trump to take office.
I don't think Trump siding with China is in any way inevitable. He could just as easily be baited into starting a shooting war purely thanks to some Beautiful Generals massaging his ego.
"China expressed its willingness to develop healthy and stable military-to-military relations with the United States on the basis of equality and respect," said the defence ministry readout.
In 2022, China refused to resume talks as a protest move after then US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in August 2022.
Their resumption early this week follows a deal struck by Chinese president Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Joe Biden during a meeting in November.
Separately, Taiwan has said it does not consider the launch of a Chinese satellite over the island's southern airspace on Tuesday an act of election interference.
Chinese state media said the satellite, named the Einstein Probe, is used to "observe mysterious transient phenomena".
The island's main opposition party the Kuomintang (KMT) criticised the "arbitrary" use of an islandwide alert as fear-mongering.
The original article contains 375 words, the summary contains 136 words. Saved 64%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
I mean, imagine if a Chinese military force decided to occupy Hawaii for 60 years, after a bunch of Jan 6thers fled there and declared it independent by way of some Sovereign Citizen gibberish. Do you think there's anyone in Washington who would be running on the "No big deal, let them have it" platform?
I think they are taking China's concerns seriously. That's why they are arming Taiwan.
I'm tired of this idea that the people of a region shouldn't have the choice of whether or not they are a part of a country. This applies to Taiwan, Ukraine, Chechnya, Palestine, Catalan, Tibet, or anyone else that wants to break off from a country people other than them decided they were a part of.