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China Fighter Jets Will Fly Over Taiwan to Declare Sovereignty, State Media Says

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China Fighter Jets Will Fly Over Taiwan to Declare Sovereignty, State Media Says
BY JOHN FENG ON 4/13/21 AT 8:40 AM EDT


00:17
Chinese Fighter Pilot Says Taiwan ‘All Ours’ After Being Asked to Leave Airspace
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Chinese fighter jets will fly over Taiwan to "declare sovereignty" if relations between Washington and Taipei continue to improve, a prominent state media figure said after Beijing sent 25 warplanes toward the island on Monday.

Hu Xijin, chief editor of China's nationalistic Communist Party newspaper the Global Times, fired back at recent comments by Secretary Antony Blinken and said the military operation was a response to the State Department's loosening of interaction guidelines between officials from the U.S. and Taiwan.

The People's Liberation Army would "step up military pressure" in the event of a further warming of U.S.-Taiwan ties, he said. "If Taiwan forces open fire, that will be the moment of all-out war across the Taiwan Strait," he added.

The People's Republic of China claims ownership of democratic Taiwan despite having never governed it in the seven decades since its founding after the Chinese Civil War. The Chinese government has never renounced the use of force in its ultimate goal of "reunifying" the island, while Taiwan continues to be run as a de facto state and maintains several unofficial, yet crucial, global partners in an ambiguous existence known as the status quo.
Despite Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen's insistence that her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) intends to maintain the status quo, her efforts to make the country less reliant on the Chinese economy—and her demand that its democratically elected leaders be treated with parity by their cross-strait counterparts—have been perceived by Beijing as incremental moves toward de jure independence.

The U.S., Taiwan's most important security partner, has signaled its approval of the Taiwanese government's posture and lent its support as China's military intimidation escalated in recent years.
Beijing's "increasingly aggressive actions" were of "real concern" to the Biden administration, Secretary of State Blinken told NBC's Meet the Press on Sunday as he reaffirmed the U.S. commitment toward Taiwan and its self-defense through the Taiwan Relations Act.
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Asked about the possibility of a Chinese invasion of the self-ruled island, Blinken said it would be "a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing status quo by force."
In a short video posted on the Global Times website, Hu criticized the remarks and described them as "deceptive." He charged Washington and Taipei with being the "real destroyers" of the status quo, citing the U.S.' failure to stop the DPP's rejection of Beijing's "one-China principle," under which Taiwan exists as a Chinese region.
"If the U.S. and Taiwan authorities continue their current policy, the mainland will definitely step up military pressure," Hu said. "If the U.S. and Taiwan take further prominent actions, PLA fighter jets will fly over Taiwan island to declare sovereignty."
After 25 Chinese warplanes, including 18 fighter jets and four nuclear-capable heavy bombers, flew sorties into Taiwan's air defense zone on Monday, Hu said it was a response to the Biden administration's amended U.S.-Taiwan communication guidelines, which reportedly allow officials from Taipei to visit federal buildings.
"The guidance underscores Taiwan is a vibrant democracy and an important security and economic partner that is also a force for good in the international community," State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in a statement announcing the protocols last Friday.


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"In my opinion, this is a response to the State Department's new U.S.-Taiwan interaction guidelines," Hu wrote on his Weibo account while announcing China's warplane figures on Tuesday.
PLA warplanes around Taiwan had caused the government in Taipei a considerable amount of pressure, the state media personality continued in Chinese. "The Taiwanese government fears PLA warplanes will fly over Taiwan to assert national sovereignty, and fears a misfire which could trigger a war."
He said Taiwan and the U.S. needed to "stop provocations" or "be prepared to welcome more PLA planes, closer to Taiwan proper and even directly above the island."
The Chinese government's newfound bullishness in the skies and seas around Taiwan has led analysts to restart the debate about America's "strategic ambiguity" regarding the defense of Taiwan.

While researchers in Taipei believe there is a trend toward "strategic clarity," Taiwan Strait watchers are divided over whether such a declaration would deter or incite a conflict.
Chinese Warplanes Perform In Air Show

A group of J-10 air fighters perform during an aerial show held to mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force on November 15, 2009, in Beijing, China.CHINA PHOTOS/GETTY IMAGES


 
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China definitely won't budge on it's Taiwan stance. Now the question is what the US will do. Will the US back down and maintain the status quo or will US seek closer relations with Taiwan and go to war.
 
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China definitely won't budge on it's Taiwan stance. Now the question is what the US will do. Will the US back down and maintain the status quo or will US seek closer relations with Taiwan and go to war.
U.S will probably give false hope to Taiwanese first and if going gets tough abandon them. That's what Iblees always does case in point is Badr. But you probably have no idea what I'm saying. Lol.
 
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Taiwan Needs to Spend More on Defense, Says a Former Diplomat


- Richard Bush ran the American Institute in Taiwan, the de facto embassy, for five years.

In 2019, Taiwan spent 1.7% of its gross domestic product on its military, according to data compiled by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. That’s just half the percentage the U.S. spent that year—not a lot for a government with bulging foreign exchange reserves that’s under threat of invasion.

China expert Richard Bush said on April 14 that Taiwan should raise defense spending and get more serious about training its soldiers to discourage China from attempting to take it by force. “Taiwan is not Canada,” Bush said. “It’s not Norway. It faces a serious adversary.”

From 1997 to 2002, Bush was chairman of the American Institute in Taiwan, which functions like an embassy in the absence of formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan. Since then he’s been at the Brookings Institution, currently as a nonresident senior fellow.

Bush participated in a Brookings videoconference to publicize his new book, Difficult Choices: Taiwan’s Quest for Security and the Good Life.

Taiwan, officially the Republic of China, is an island state 100 miles off the coast of the People’s Republic of China. In 1949, Chinese Nationalist forces evacuated to the island after being defeated by the Chinese Communist Party in a civil war. The U.S. doesn’t officially recognize Taiwan, but on April 9 the State Department issued new guidelines liberalizing contact with Taiwanese officials to reflect a “deepening unofficial relationship.”

Bush said China’s strategy to absorb Taiwan is “coercion without violence,” consisting of “a variety of steps to intimidate, marginalize, interfere, undermine confidence of people in their government, in their democracy, in their ability to hold out.” It hasn’t worked: In January 2020, President Tsai Ing-wen, who’s vowed to defend Taiwan’s sovereignty, won reelection in a landslide over a China-friendly opponent, Han Kuo-yu.

Rather than trying to woo the Taiwanese, Chinese President Xi Jinping has stepped up threats against them. This month Chinese fighter jets have repeatedly entered Taiwan’s air defense identification zone. A Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman warned in January that “Taiwan independence means war.”

Bush said strong deterrence is the best way to prevent a war. He said, “If there were a war and if the U.S. decided to intervene, we could not do it on Day 2 of the conflict. And so Taiwan is going to have to hold on.” That, he said, requires a stronger military. “If they want security perhaps they’re going to have to pay for it,” he said.

Other Americans have delivered similar messages recently. Ashton Carter, who was President Barack Obama’s defense secretary and is now director of the Belfer Center for Science & International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School, said in a videoconference hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on April 7 that the U.S. should consistently counter Xi’s pressure on Taiwan. “His hubris accumulates like a snowball rolling downhill if you don’t push back,” Carter said.


 
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China Fighter Jets Will Fly Over Taiwan to Declare Sovereignty, State Media Says
BY JOHN FENG ON 4/13/21 AT 8:40 AM EDT


00:17
Chinese Fighter Pilot Says Taiwan ‘All Ours’ After Being Asked to Leave Airspace
SHARE
Chinese fighter jets will fly over Taiwan to "declare sovereignty" if relations between Washington and Taipei continue to improve, a prominent state media figure said after Beijing sent 25 warplanes toward the island on Monday.

Hu Xijin, chief editor of China's nationalistic Communist Party newspaper the Global Times, fired back at recent comments by Secretary Antony Blinken and said the military operation was a response to the State Department's loosening of interaction guidelines between officials from the U.S. and Taiwan.

The People's Liberation Army would "step up military pressure" in the event of a further warming of U.S.-Taiwan ties, he said. "If Taiwan forces open fire, that will be the moment of all-out war across the Taiwan Strait," he added.

The People's Republic of China claims ownership of democratic Taiwan despite having never governed it in the seven decades since its founding after the Chinese Civil War. The Chinese government has never renounced the use of force in its ultimate goal of "reunifying" the island, while Taiwan continues to be run as a de facto state and maintains several unofficial, yet crucial, global partners in an ambiguous existence known as the status quo.
Despite Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen's insistence that her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) intends to maintain the status quo, her efforts to make the country less reliant on the Chinese economy—and her demand that its democratically elected leaders be treated with parity by their cross-strait counterparts—have been perceived by Beijing as incremental moves toward de jure independence.

The U.S., Taiwan's most important security partner, has signaled its approval of the Taiwanese government's posture and lent its support as China's military intimidation escalated in recent years.
Beijing's "increasingly aggressive actions" were of "real concern" to the Biden administration, Secretary of State Blinken told NBC's Meet the Press on Sunday as he reaffirmed the U.S. commitment toward Taiwan and its self-defense through the Taiwan Relations Act.
NEWSWEEK SUBSCRIPTION OFFERS >
Asked about the possibility of a Chinese invasion of the self-ruled island, Blinken said it would be "a serious mistake for anyone to try to change the existing status quo by force."
In a short video posted on the Global Times website, Hu criticized the remarks and described them as "deceptive." He charged Washington and Taipei with being the "real destroyers" of the status quo, citing the U.S.' failure to stop the DPP's rejection of Beijing's "one-China principle," under which Taiwan exists as a Chinese region.
"If the U.S. and Taiwan authorities continue their current policy, the mainland will definitely step up military pressure," Hu said. "If the U.S. and Taiwan take further prominent actions, PLA fighter jets will fly over Taiwan island to declare sovereignty."
After 25 Chinese warplanes, including 18 fighter jets and four nuclear-capable heavy bombers, flew sorties into Taiwan's air defense zone on Monday, Hu said it was a response to the Biden administration's amended U.S.-Taiwan communication guidelines, which reportedly allow officials from Taipei to visit federal buildings.
"The guidance underscores Taiwan is a vibrant democracy and an important security and economic partner that is also a force for good in the international community," State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in a statement announcing the protocols last Friday.


China's Bet U.S. Is Bluffing on Taiwan War Risks Dangerous Miscalculation
READ MORE
China's Bet U.S. Is Bluffing on Taiwan War Risks Dangerous Miscalculation
"In my opinion, this is a response to the State Department's new U.S.-Taiwan interaction guidelines," Hu wrote on his Weibo account while announcing China's warplane figures on Tuesday.
PLA warplanes around Taiwan had caused the government in Taipei a considerable amount of pressure, the state media personality continued in Chinese. "The Taiwanese government fears PLA warplanes will fly over Taiwan to assert national sovereignty, and fears a misfire which could trigger a war."
He said Taiwan and the U.S. needed to "stop provocations" or "be prepared to welcome more PLA planes, closer to Taiwan proper and even directly above the island."
The Chinese government's newfound bullishness in the skies and seas around Taiwan has led analysts to restart the debate about America's "strategic ambiguity" regarding the defense of Taiwan.

While researchers in Taipei believe there is a trend toward "strategic clarity," Taiwan Strait watchers are divided over whether such a declaration would deter or incite a conflict.
Chinese Warplanes Perform In Air Show

A group of J-10 air fighters perform during an aerial show held to mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force on November 15, 2009, in Beijing, China.CHINA PHOTOS/GETTY IMAGES


And in other recent news...

Russia massing troops near border with Ukraine.


LOL. US now has it's hand full with 2 fronts thousands of miles apart.
 
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And in other recent news...

Russia massing troops near border with Ukraine.


LOL. US now has it's hand full with 2 fronts thousands of miles apart.
And Biden send a symbolic ex diplomats which has no meaning but just to answer for US media.
 
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And there will be another article like this next week and the week after etc. etc.
Instead of just start attacking TW, they will just keep posting the same article like this again and again.

I remembered Cnese here said that CN will attack TW in 2020...yeah,and now is 2021 they r still barking the same things like 10 years ago abt TW :lol:
 
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Biden must be looking for Trump , to hand over the reign back to him.

Saying "Kis mushkil me phans gia". :sarcastic:

Now we understand Chinese President orders to PLA to get ready for war.
 
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Push comes to shove, the US will throw Taiwan under the bus. MIC is just goading Taiwan into buying weapon platforms to keep them industries running.
 
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These jets will be promptly shot down. China does not want to face a multifront war against a coalition of US + EU + Japan + ROK + India + Taiwan.
 
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