Santa Fe New Mexican

China won’t rule out force to reunify Taiwan

- By Daisuke Wakabayash­i, Katie Benner and Steve Lohr New York Times

BEIJING — China said it will not renounce the use of force in efforts to reunify Taiwan with the mainland and vowed to take all necessary military measures to defeat “separatist­s.”

In a national defense white paper released Wednesday, China listed among its top priorities its resolve to contain “Taiwan independen­ce” and combat what it considers separatist forces in Tibet and the far west region of Xinjiang.

The paper, published every few years, is an outline of China’s national defense policy. Wednesday’s report highlighte­d China’s “defensive” approach, but also pledged to “surely counteratt­ack if attacked.”

Defense Ministry spokesman Wu Qian said the threat of Taiwan separatism is growing and warned that those who are seeking Taiwan independen­ce will meet a dead end. “It anyone dares to separate Taiwan from China, the Chinese army will certainly fight, resolutely defending the country’s sovereign unity and territoria­l integrity,” Wu said.

Taiwan, a democratic­allygovern­ed island, split from the Communist Party-ruled mainland China amid civil war in 1949. China maintains that Taiwan is part of its territory and seeks “complete reunificat­ion.”

The U.S. has repeatedly raised Beijing’s ire by selling arms to Taiwan. U.S. law requires that it provide Taiwan with sufficient defense equipment and services for self-defense.

Earlier this month, the U.S. tentativel­y approved a sale of $2.2 billion in arms to Taiwan — a proposal which had prompted China to threaten sanctions against the United States.

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