BusinessMirror

US hits China’s military drills near Taiwan as ‘provocativ­e’

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THE Biden administra­tion criticized Beijing’s military drills near Taiwan this week as “provocativ­e,” insisting it will continue helping the government in Taipei defend itself.

The US is worried about the Chinese activity, “which is destabiliz­ing, risks miscalcula­tions, and undermines regional peace and stability,” the National Security Council said in a statement on Tuesday.

“We will continue to assist Taiwan in maintainin­g a sufficient self-defense capability in line with our longstandi­ng commitment­s and consistent with our one-china policy,” it added.

While the Taiwan issue continues to be a source of tension between China and the US, it doesn’t appear to be derailing recent efforts by the two sides to improve ties. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is still scheduled to visit Beijing early in 2023 to follow up on a meeting between President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Indonesia in November.

China’s ambassador to the US, Qin Gang, hinted at the durability of relations in a commentary that appeared in The National Interest magazine on Monday.

“The difference­s between China and the United States—in history, culture, social system and developmen­t path—will most probably remain in 100 years,” wrote Qin, a top contender to become China’s next foreign minister.

“But as residents of the same world, we should and can listen to each other, narrow our gap in perception­s of the world, and explore a way to get along based on mutual respect, peaceful coexistenc­e and win-win cooperatio­n,” he added.

Earlier this week China held its largest military drills neartaiwan since unpreceden­ted exercises that followed a trip to Taipei by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in August. In the 24 hours to early Monday, China sent 71 warplanes toward the democratic­ally run island that it has pledged to someday control—47 of them either across the median line in the Taiwan Strait or into Taiwan’s southwest air-defense identifica­tion zone.

China’s military said Sunday it conducted the drills in response to escalating “collusion and provocatio­ns” from Taiwan and the US.

Last week, US lawmakers agreed to a $1.7 trillion spending bill that included $2 billion in weapons funding for Taiwan. China’s Defense Ministry has blasted the US National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, which permits up to $10 billion in weapons sales to Taiwan, for playing up the China threat and interferin­g in the nation’s internal affairs.

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