China Daily

Tsai paints false picture of situation in Asia

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Taiwan leader Tsai Ing-wen’s warning that the Chinese mainland poses a threat to Asia is nothing more than her whistling past a graveyard.

Speaking to CNN this week, she said that if countries in the region were not willing to submit to the will of the Chinese mainland they would face similar threats to those made against the island.

It is prepostero­us for Tsai to describe the Chinese mainland as being despotic in its relations with its Asian neighbors, and to imagine that in doing so those countries will stand behind her pro-independen­ce stance.

By trying to portray herself as standing in the front ranks of those resisting a threat from the Chinese mainland, she was painting a picture of the situation in Asia that does not exist.

The true picture, which she is trying to obscure, is that her administra­tion is becoming increasing­ly isolated in the world.

Indeed, it is not only internatio­nally, Tsai and the Democratic Progressiv­e Party are also losing their support on the island as well. It is only in the picture she is painting that the Chinese mainland is a threat. But having alienated Beijing with their insistence on Taiwan independen­ce, Tsai and the DPP are now reaping the consequenc­es of their actions.

The trouncing she and the DPP suffered in the local elections in 2018 points to the fact that Taiwan people are fed up with her policy of estranging the island from the Chinese mainland.

Yes, the Chinese mainland has never excluded and it will never renounce the option of using military means to realize reunificat­ion. But that does not pose a threat to the Chinese compatriot­s on the island, only to those secessioni­sts who harbor the ill intention of splitting the island from the motherland.

It is Tsai’s refusal to recognize the 1992 Consensus that there is only one China and Taiwan is part of China that has spoiled the otherwise good relations across the Taiwan Straits since her election as the leader on the island in 2016.

Tsai has declared that she will stand for reelection in 2020. But she should know that she will hardly be accepted by the Taiwan people unless she changes her stance and acknowledg­es the one-China principle, as this is the only way any leader on the island can ensure economic prosperity and social progress for the people on the island.

In her interview with CNN, Tsai said she wanted to “complete” her vision for Taiwan. But her lack of support on the island, and even within the DPP, shows how out of touch with reality she is.

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