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China's response to Pelosi visit a sign of future intentions

Xi, Putin to attend G20 summit in Bali, says Indonesian president


August 20, 2022 00:00:00


BANGKOK, Aug 19 (AP/BBC): China's response to US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan was anything but subtle - dispatching warships and military aircraft to all sides of the self-governing island democracy, and firing ballistic missiles into the waters nearby.

The dust has still not settled, with Taiwan this week conducting drills of its own and Beijing announcing it has more maneuvers planned, but experts say a lot can already be gleaned from what China has done, and has not done, so far. China will also be drawing lessons on its own military capabilities from the exercises, which more closely resembled what an actual strike on the island claimed by Beijing as its own territory would look like, and from the American and Taiwanese response.

During the nearly weeklong maneuvers that followed Pelosi's early August visit, China sailed ships and flew aircraft regularly across the median line in the Taiwan Strait, claiming the de facto boundary did not exist, fired missiles over Taiwan itself, and challenged established norms by firing missiles into Japan's exclusive economic zone.

"I think we are in for a risky period of testing boundaries and finding out who can achieve escalatory dominance across the diplomatic, military and economic domains," said David Chen, an analyst with CENTRA Technology, a US-based consulting firm.

Pelosi was the highest-level member of the US government to visit Taiwan in 25 years, and her visit came at a particularly sensitive time, as Chinese President Xi Jinping prepares to seek a third five-year term as leader of the ruling Communist Party later this year.

Under Xi, China has been increasingly forceful in declaring that Taiwan must be brought under its control - by force if necessary - and US military officials have said that Beijing may seek a military solution within the next few years.

Tensions were already high, with China conducting regular military flights near Taiwan and the US routinely sailing warships through the Taiwan Strait to emphasize they are international waters.

China accuses the US of encouraging the island's independence through the sale of weapons and engagement between US politicians and the island's government.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying called Pelosi's visit a "serious provocation" and accused Washington of breaking the status quo and "interfering in China's internal affairs."

"China is not the old China of 120 years ago, and we are not Iraq, Syria or Afghanistan - we will not allow any foreign force to bully, suppress or enslave us," she told reporters in Beijing. "Whoever wants to do so will be on a collision course with the Great Wall of steel forged by the 1.4 billion Chinese people."

A BBC report adds: China's Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin both plan to attend the Group of 20 summit in Bali in November, Indonesian president Joko Widodo says.

"Xi Jinping will come. President Putin has also told me he will come," Mr Widodo, also known as Jokowi, told Bloomberg News in an interview.

This is the first confirmation that both leaders will attend the summit.

It will be the first global summit since Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the heightened tensions over Taiwan.

It would also be the first time Mr Xi has left China since January 2020 when the country shut its borders at the start of the Covid pandemic. Since then, he only left the mainland to mark the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to China on July 1 this year.

The November summit will be much-awaited given that US President Joe Biden is also expected to attend - it's unclear if he will meet Mr Putin.

But reports have hinted at the possibility of a face-to-face meeting between Mr Biden and Mr Xi soon - ahead of the summit or on its sidelines.


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