UN China sends carrier through Taiwan Strait after Xi Jinping warns against separatism

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/dipl...-sends-carrier-through-taiwan-strait-after-xi

Taiwan has sent ships and aircraft to shadow an aircraft carrier group from the Chinese mainland through the narrow Taiwan Strait, its defence ministry said on Wednesday, after Chinese President Xi Jinping offered his strongest warning against Taiwan separatism to date. Beijing claims the self-ruled island as its sacred territory and considers it a wayward province, which Xi said on Tuesday would face the “punishment of history” for any attempt at separatism.

Taiwan’s defence ministry said the carrier group, led by the mainland’s sole operational aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, entered the waterway late on Tuesday, but kept on its western side. By midday on Wednesday it had left Taiwan’s air defence identification zone heading southwest, the ministry said, adding it looked like Beijing was conducting drills.

Taiwan’s military sent ships and aircraft to shadow the carrier group the entire way, but spotted nothing out of the ordinary and people in Taiwan should not be concerned, it said.

The mainland’s defence ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In January, the Liaoning sailed twice through the Taiwan Strait, in what Beijing said was part of routine drills.

Taiwan says Beijing has ramped up military exercises around the island in the past year or so. The island is one of the mainland’s most sensitive issues and a potential military flashpoint.

Beijing’s hostility towards Taipei has risen since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, a member of the island’s pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party.

The mainland suspects Tsai wants to push for formal independence, which would cross a red line for Communist Party leaders in Beijing, although Tsai has always said she wanted to maintain the status quo and was committed to ensuring peace.

The mainland’s Taiwan Affairs Office on Monday expressed anger at Taiwanese Premier William Lai’s description of the island as a sovereign independent country, calling it a “serious provocation” and said Taiwan never was, or could ever be, one.

Beijing has also been infuriated by a law signed last week by US President Donald Trump that encourages the United States to send senior officials to Taiwan to meet their Taiwanese counterparts, and vice versa.

US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Alex Wong arrived in Taiwan on Tuesday, and was expected to speak at a business event in Taipei on Wednesday, which Tsai would also attend.

Beijing has already lodged a protest over the new Taiwan Travel Law, saying it violates US commitments not to restore formal exchanges severed when Washington switched recognition from Taipei to Beijing.
 
It's just sabre rattling. All escalations of Cross-Straits tensions are calculated moves by China to either pressure American diplomatically (for the recent steel tariffs in this case) or to distract the Chinese populace from internal crises like faltering economy or social unrest.
 
It's just sabre rattling. All escalations of Cross-Straits tensions are calculated moves by China to either pressure American diplomatically (for the recent steel tariffs in this case) or to distract the Chinese populace from internal crises like faltering economy or social unrest.
This, but they are also pissed that the Status Quo concerning Taiwan has slightly altered. Xi recently announced that he's willing to "fight a bloody battle" to regain China's place in the world and to prevent secession of Taiwan.
Unlike their treaty with Japan, the US is not forced to intervene in Taiwan in case of a war with China, so there is a slight chance that China might start attempt to start some crap, trying to overwhelm Taiwan so quickly that the US can't intervene or simply so forcefully that the US simply doesn't want to intervene... Of course that could turn out to be a huge miscalculation and the US participates in such a war.

So yeah, China isn't really hellbent on starting a war and this whole thing is just more sabre rattling, but there is a small chance that it could escalate to war.
 
We'll let them have Taiwan without a fuss if they take North Korea too. Fair deal?
 
China might start attempt to start some crap, trying to overwhelm Taiwan so quickly that the US can't intervene or simply so forcefully that the US simply doesn't want to intervene... Of course that could turn out to be a huge miscalculation and the US participates in such a war.
The million man swim, as it is known in military circles. As neato as their recycled Soviet baby flattop is (with it's 20-ish knockoff navalised Sukhois) the PLAN still has a looooooong way to go before they can be taken as a credible invasion threat to Taiwan.

However, blowing shit up, blockading, and fucking up their economy to compel favorable surrender terms is a different story.
 
Wang Jingwei > Cash Me Check
Race traitors don't impress me, and if you're going to sell out, you better be getting at least something for your people in return. For all his faults, Marechal Petain was able to keep the Vichy half of France free and autonomous of total German occupation for the better part of two years, sparing it from four years of war in total. Wang Jingwei cucked out completely for nothing in return.
 
Apparently Xi is taking a page out of Kim-Jun-Un. Unfortunately, the false China People's Republic of China has a not shit military that could wipe us out. Oh and Taiwan is:
A. a country and
B. the rightful government of China
 
Can't wait for 2050 when India's population is higher than China's and Taipei is the capital of the reformed Republic of China.
 
https://in.mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idINKBN1H30HE

U.S. Republicans press for F-35 fighter jet sale to Taiwan

(Reuters) - Two senior U.S. Republican senators asked the Trump administration on Monday to allow the sale of Lockheed Martin Corp. F-35 fighter jets to Taiwan, saying it would help it "remain a democracy" in the face of threats from China.

China's hostility towards Taiwan has grown since Tsai Ing-wen from the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party won presidential elections on the island in 2016. China claims Taiwan as its own and the self-ruled island which is one of China's most sensitive issues.

"These fighters will have a positive impact on Taiwan's self-defense and would act as a necessary deterrent to China's aggressive military posture across the Asia-Pacific region," Senators John Cornyn, the assistant majority leader, and James Inhofe, a senior member of the Armed Services Committee, said in a letter to President Donald Trump.

"After years of military modernization, China shows the ability to wage war against Taiwan for the first time since the 1950's," they wrote. "However, with your leadership, it is possible to help Taiwan remain a democracy, free to establish a relationship with China that is not driven by military coercion."

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The sale of the jets could increase tensions with Beijing, where officials were infuriated when Trump signed legislation this month that encourages the United States to send senior officials to Taiwan to meet Taiwanese counterparts and vice versa.

On Tuesday, the office of Taiwan's president reiterated its support for the legislation and awarded U.S. Representative Ed Royce, who is currently visiting the island, a medal of honour for his contributions toward Taiwan-U.S. relations.

"President Tsai believes that stable relations between Taiwan and the U.S. serve as an important foundation for peace, stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region. Taiwan has the ability and is willing to work with the United States in the Indo-Pacific region to make more contributions," the presidential office said.

Separately, Liu Jieyi, head of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, told state television late on Monday that "certain Americans" were trying to play the Taiwan card, which harmed the interest of people both in China and Taiwan.

"This is duping Taiwan compatriots," Liu said, without naming any U.S. officials. "It is futile for any outside forces to try and play the Taiwan card and doing anything to harm the interest of the Chinese people."

The U.S. military has put countering China and Russia at the center of a new national defense strategy unveiled by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis in January.

Other U.S. allies in the Asia Pacific region, such as Singapore, also are exploring the purchase of the stealthy F-35.

Lockheed hit its 2017 target to deliver 66 F-35 fighter jets to the United States and its allies last year.
 
Can't wait for 2050 when India's population is higher than China's and Taipei is the capital of the reformed Republic of China.
I can't wait until India becomes a superpower by 2020, war breaks out with China over Aksai Chin and Arunachal Pradesh, each killing off their overpopulation. It would potentially allow for an independent Tibet, and solve the Muslim problem with Pakistan/Bangladesh and Uyghurstan in the process.

The unified capital should either stay in Beijing, or there be a two capital system between it and Taipei. Alternatively, Xi'an could be the unified capital because of its central location and historic role called Chang'an, which served the longest intervals as the capital of many Chinese dynasties.

Chinese dictators have to kill at least 10x the western baseline to count as mass murderers.
That was part of my point.
 
This, but they are also pissed that the Status Quo concerning Taiwan has slightly altered. Xi recently announced that he's willing to "fight a bloody battle" to regain China's place in the world and to prevent secession of Taiwan.
Unlike their treaty with Japan, the US is not forced to intervene in Taiwan in case of a war with China, so there is a slight chance that China might start attempt to start some crap, trying to overwhelm Taiwan so quickly that the US can't intervene or simply so forcefully that the US simply doesn't want to intervene... Of course that could turn out to be a huge miscalculation and the US participates in such a war.

So yeah, China isn't really hellbent on starting a war and this whole thing is just more sabre rattling, but there is a small chance that it could escalate to war.

China is incapable of fighting a modern war and its leadership is well aware of that fact.
 
I can't wait until India becomes a superpower by 2020, war breaks out with China over Aksai Chin and Arunachal Pradesh, each killing off their overpopulation. It would potentially allow for an independent Tibet, and solve the Muslim problem with Pakistan/Bangladesh and Uyghurstan in the process.
Screw that, let's see a new Tibetan Empire. If he could the Dalai Lama would kill you and everyone you love.
 
The Liaoning is a leaky piece of shit. It was barely functional when the Soviets had it 30 years ago, and it was so shitty the Chinese were originally going to use it as a floating casino. I'd hate to be a sailor on board that ship, go read on the shit the sailors aboard Liaoning's sister ship Admiral Kuznetsov have to deal with. Thank god the Chinamen feel like wasting so much on many operating such a garbage carrier.
 
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