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China Says Taiwan Issue Could Take It to ‘War’ With U.S.

China, PLA, Navy, Eastern, Theater, Command, exercises

A senior Chinese official has warned that differences over Taiwan, if not managed properly, had the potential to spark an all-out confrontation between China and the United States.

“Taiwan is one of the very few issues that might take China and the United States to conflict or even a war,” Jing Quan, minister of the Chinese embassy in Washington, D.C., told reporters during a virtual press conference Friday.

Given the sensitive nature of the issue, he argued that “extra caution and a sense of responsibility is indispensable when it comes to Taiwan.”

“The right way for China and the U.S. to get along is to follow the spirit of mutual respect, peaceful coexistence, avoidance of confrontation and win-win cooperation,” Jing said. “But it requires joint efforts of the two sides.”

Footage published August 5 shows members of the People’s Liberation Army Navy participates in China’s largest-scale drills around Taiwan in response to U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s recent visit to the disputed island.
Eastern Theater Command/Chinese People’s Liberation Army

Chinese officials have accused the U.S. of eroding commitments its One China policy, established alongside three joint communique that served as the basis for Washington’s relationship with Beijing. The U.S. established diplomatic relations with China in 1979 and cut official ties with Taiwan, though it has maintained informal relations in the form of political contacts and military support that has expanded in recent years.

In the latest flare-up of already tense bilateral relations between Washington and Beijing, U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi traveled to Taiwan, which China continues to claim as part of its territory. After repeated warnings, China responded to the trip by staging the largest-ever People’s Liberation Army exercises around Taiwan, including air and sea drills and live-fire launches that saw missiles fly over the disputed island.

The U.S. urged calm and has sought to downplay the significance of Pelosi’s visit, the first of its kind for a House speaker in 25 years, in a bid to avoid a crisis. But China has reacted strongly on the diplomatic front as well, including canceling talks and meetings between the two militaries and suspending cooperation on the repatriation of illegal immigrants, legal assistance in criminal matters, against transnational crimes, counter-narcotics and discussions on climate change.

Jing said Pelosi’s visit “has a severe impact on the political foundation of China-U.S….

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