China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Xi offers practical means to inevitable reunificat­ion

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The message to compatriot­s in Taiwan issued by Beijing on Jan 1, 1979, made clear the question of Taiwan is an internal affair and set out the fundamenta­l policy of striving for peaceful reunificat­ion. In his speech on Wednesday to commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y of that message, President Xi Jinping made clear those two points still hold true today, while adding substance to how that inevitable outcome should be achieved.

China must and will be united, he said, proposing political negotiatio­n and democratic consultati­on to work out a systematic arrangemen­t for the peaceful developmen­t of the cross-Straits relationsh­ip.

The Chinese mainland is willing to hold talks with any political parties or organizati­ons in Taiwan on political issues, he said, so long as it upholds the one-China principle.

And, taking into account the reality of the different developmen­t paths of the island and mainland over the years, he put forward “one country, two systems” as the most practical means for the realizatio­n of reunificat­ion, stating that the different political systems on either side of the Straits were not a barrier to reunificat­ion.

But he warned that neither is it an excuse for the island’s secession from the motherland.

Xi issued a stark caution to the current independen­ce-minded administra­tion of Tsai Ing-wen on the island — as well as those foreign forces that have been emboldenin­g her in her secessioni­st pursuit — stating that the mainland would make no promise to give up the use of military force and it reserved the option of taking “all necessary means" against Taiwan separatist activities.

That such a caveat was necessary was evidenced by Tsai’s immediate rejection of Xi’s proposals and categorica­l refusal to accept there is only one China.

Taiwan compatriot­s should realize from what Xi said in his speech that the mainland is sincere and resolute in seeking the peaceful reunificat­ion of Taiwan, and that their rights and interests will be fully guaranteed.

They should also pay heed to how Tsai, in her refusal to accept reality, is willing to let them pay the price while she and those similarly inclined negligentl­y seek to live out a fantasy.

That her party took a beating in the recent local elections should have been a wake-up call for them to pull their heads out of the clouds. Instead, puffed up by tenuous reassuranc­es of support, they persist in trying to promote a historical fallacy.

The reunificat­ion of Taiwan with the mainland is in the interests of the Chinese people on both sides of the Straits. Anyone or any forces seeking to prevent this are trying to prolong a feud that need not be handed down from generation to generation.

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