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China talks tough, but what’s next?

- YUCHEN LI

China’s National People’s Congress began its most prominent annual parliament­ary meeting on Tuesday, kicking off a week of sessions that provide an opportunit­y for the outside world to gain insight on Beijing’s policy direction for the upcoming year.

On Taiwan, Chinese Premier Li Qiang told the rubber-stamp legislatur­e that Beijing would be “firm in advancing the cause of China reunificat­ion” as part of the “overall strategy” of the Chinese Communist Party (CPP) to “resolve the Taiwan issue in the new era.” Beijing considers self-ruled Taiwan to be Chinese territory, and President Xi Jinping has made “reuniting” the democratic island with mainland China a long-running centrepiec­e of his strategic policy. However, Premier Li’s report this year came without the word “peaceful” before reunificat­ion, which had been included in language used in previous years.

The ostensibly more hawkish tone comes as China’s military continues to conduct regular air and naval maneuvers in the Taiwan Strait, including a large-scale exercise in April 2023 that completely encircled the island that came after President Tsai Ing-wen met with high-level US lawmakers.

And in January, Taiwan elected Lai Ching-te from the Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) to become the next president. The party, which will see a third term in office, considers Taiwan as sovereign, but it has stopped short of advocating a formal declaratio­n of independen­ce, which would be a major red line for Beijing. Beijing has called Lai a “dangerous separatist,” and before the election, vowed to “crush” any form of “attempting” Taiwanese independen­ce. On Tuesday, Premier Li reiterated that the CPP’s strategy would continue to “firmly oppose ‘Taiwan independen­ce’ separatism and external interferen­ce.”

Li’s report also said China’s defense budget in 2024 would increase by 7.2%, which is in line with last year’s spending, but has more than doubled since 2015.

Chang Wu-ueh, a China study professor at Taiwan’s Tamkang University, told DW the focus on the wording in Li’s report has been “excessivel­y interprete­d.”

“In general, China’s overall strategy still prioritise­s peace as the foremost considerat­ion, while non-peaceful means are a last resort,” Chang said. “Key officials in Beijing and important state media have never mentioned the phrase ‘reunificat­ion by force’ They, at most, have only discussed why non-peaceful means should not be abandoned,” he added.

Wang Hsin-Hsien, an expert on Chinese politics at the National Chengchi University in Taiwan, told DW that in the sentence prior to calling for “reunificat­ion,” Premier Li had advocated promoting “cross-strait relations and peaceful developmen­t.”

Wang said Li’s statement simply broke up the meaning of “peaceful reunificat­ion” into two sentences.

The experts pointed out that the government work reports during the sessions of the National People’s Congress rarely deliver drastic changes in China’s policy towards Taiwan. This year is also not the first time China has omitted the word “peaceful” from its statements on Taiwan. However, expert Wang said that China’s statements on its Taiwan policy could become less reliable indicators of its plans, with the possibilit­y that Beijing will now “do more, and say less.” He added that China is increasing using “grey zone” tactics to pressure Taiwan.

This article was provided by Deutsche Welle

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