The Citizen (Gauteng)

Beijing ‘flirts with danger’

BIDEN: US ARMY WILL DEFEND TAIWAN’S INDEPENDEN­CE

- Tokyo

China has no room for compromise or concession, says spokespers­on.

President Joe Biden vowed yesterday that US forces would defend Taiwan militarily if China attempted to take control of the self-ruled island by force, warning Beijing was “flirting with danger”.

The remarks, made in Tokyo where he is meeting Japan’s prime minister ahead of a regional summit today, were Biden’s strongest to date on the issue and come amid rising tensions over China’s growing economic and military power.

Washington and allies like Japan have framed their tough response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a warning to others, especially China, against unilateral military action.

Biden hammered that message home after talks with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in which the pair agreed to monitor Chinese naval activity and joint Chinese-Russia exercises.

Biden then went further. Asked if Washington was willing to get involved militarily to defend Taiwan, he replied: “Yes.”

“That’s the commitment we made,” he added.

“We agreed with the One China policy, we signed on to it... but the idea that it can be taken by force is just not appropriat­e, it would dislocate the entire region and would be another action similar to Ukraine,” Biden said.

Biden directly linked the fates of Ukraine and Taiwan, saying Western sanctions on Russia must exact a “long-term price” because, otherwise, “what signal does that send to China about the cost of attempting to take Taiwan by force?”

He warned Beijing was already “flirting with danger right now by flying so close and all the manoeuvres undertaken” – referring to a growing number of Chinese sorties, naval exercises and other power projection in the Taiwan Straits.

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin swiftly responded, declaring that “no one should underestim­ate the firm resolve, staunch will and strong ability of the Chinese people in defending national sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity”.

“China has no room for compromise or concession,” the spokespers­on said.

Like most nations, the US diplomatic­ally recognises Beijing over Taiwan. But it also maintains de facto diplomatic ties with the self-ruled, democratic island.

For decades it has maintained a policy of “strategic ambiguity” in which it never makes clear what it would do in the event of an invasion.

The policy was designed both to keep Beijing from declaring war and also to stop Taiwan from formally declaring independen­ce.

Biden’s remarks yesterday overshadow­ed his roll-out of a new, 13-nation regional trade framework. –

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