the ro1e of taiwan strait in the us strategic pivot to asiasectioni
The Taiwan question eventually has to be solved between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait, and "if Taipei behaves irresponsibly, it will pay the price, but so will the rest of us, so I think it should be responsible," he added. Having worked personally on the normalization of China-U....
Should Hou be elected, Washington, which has a history of working with the Kuomintang, would be prepared to engage with him to continue strengthening U.S-.Taiwan relations, and any easing in cross-strait tensions that would come with his election could allow the U.S. to focus on ot...
The remarks proved once again how badly Washington wishes to undermine the one-China principle and define "the status quo across the Taiwan Strait" at its will, all in order to use Taiwan to contain China and go after its hegemonic interests in the Asia-Pacific. But, as the true saboteur ...
The true "status quo across the Taiwan Strait" is unmistakable: both sides of the Taiwan Strait belong to the same China, Taiwan is a part of China, and China's sovereignty and territorial integrity have never been divided. Furthermore, when and how China resolves the Taiwan question are ma...
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But, as the true saboteur of peace and stability in the region and a liar who tries to blame China for changing the "status quo across the Taiwan Strait," Washington is in no position to make such a definition. For a long time, Washington has pursued a "dual-track policy" toward Taiwa...
exercise restraint in managing its disputes with Beijing over the Taiwan question and stop taking provocative actions that may result in a mutually destructive cycle of retaliation. As for US allies, they should weigh the pros and cons of giving unconditional support to Washington in cross-Strait ...
The president then said U.S. "policy towards Taiwan has not changed at all," stressing his government's commitment to "the peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, and ensuring that there's no unilateral change to the status quo." ...
President Reagan further emphasized that this linkage is intended as a “permanent imperative” of foreign policy. The United States opposes unilateral changes to the cross-Strait status quo by either side; does not support Taiwan independence; and expects cross-Strait differences to be resolved by ...