China rules against Taiwan
There’s a huge outrage over a new anti-Taiwan law enacted by China which allows China to use military force against Taiwan in case of secession. Were Taiwan to declare itself independent, it would be immediately occupied Chinese military. President Chen of Taiwan called the law a “law of aggression.” According to the Public Pundit, Taiwan is pursuing an anti-anti-secession law.
Wherever this will go, the public relations scandal is hugely detrimental. Most countries are sympathetic to the Taiwanese cause, but politically cannot afford to ignore China’s strong will or oppose them. The resulting fallout with China would be more harmful than the benefit of supporting Taiwan. So, isolated and on their own, what will they do?
| This entry was posted on Wednesday, March 16th, 2005 at 3:29 am and is tagged with taiwan law, china rules, anti secession law, military president, president chen, secession, military force, fallout, outrage, aggression, scandal, public relations, benefit. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback. |
2 Responses to “China rules against Taiwan”
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Not like china would actually do something outrages like attacking Taiwan directly. Attacking them financially is a different matter.
Asian forum
China can not remain divided.
Not because both free china and slave china want to rule the other but because communist ideology has always been war like and expansionist. Beijing won’t let Taiwan live in peace.
It has consistently remained committed to confrontation. If heaven forbid there is ever another civil war in china it will be the fault of the communists.
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