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China’s new foreign minister warns of certain US-Chinese war if Washington fails to reverse course


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China’s newly installed Minister of Foreign Affairs Qin Gang this week warned that the United States was on course for war with China unless it abruptly changed direction. The newly appointed minister dismissed talk of ‘guardrails’ to prevent such an eventuality saying US policy was on the ‘wrong path’ as President Xi Jinping told the National People’s Congress in Beijing that the United States and its allies were attempting to suppress China.

 

by Joseph O' Connor


Escalating war in Ukraine could trigger a Chinese grab for Taiwan as the United States turns the economic screws on Beijing and tries to engineer a two-speed world economy by isolating authoritarian countries under its new Indo-Pacific framework. This week’s warning from Qin Gang came just after taking up office. He dismissed American suggestions that it wanted to simply compete robustly with China while installing ‘guardrails’ to prevent a conflict as unacceptable to Beijing which seeks freedom to pursue its goals, including those related to Taiwan which Mr Qin stressed was a ‘red line’ for communist China.


China’s new Minister of Foreign Affairs Qin Gang has stated bluntly that unless the United States changes its policy towards China, then war between the two countries is inevitable. He called for Washington to revert to its policy towards the middle kingdom pursued up until the Trump presidency in 2017. It comes as a new hardline leadership took over in Beijing as the National People’s Congress met to rubber stamp a third presidential term for President Xi Jinping who has promised the party that he will bring Taiwan back under Beijing’s rule by military means if necessary, a prospect now openly speculated upon by US intelligence agencies as China’s military might grows and a corresponding alliance forms against it led by the United States.

 

As China’s President Xi Jinping, on Friday, accepted a third term as president with the country’s National People’s Congress, a rubber stamp parliament or legislature, meeting in Beijing, his newly installed Minister of Foreign Affairs pulled no punches in his opening remarks after assuming the role this week, warning of war between the United States and China.

 

Full story: https://www.thaiexaminer.com/thai-news-foreigners/2023/03/10/china-new-foreign-minister-qin-gang-warns-of-war/

 

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-- © Copyright Thai Examiner 2023-03-11
 

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  • Like 1
Posted
6 hours ago, webfact said:

China’s new Minister of Foreign Affairs Qin Gang has stated bluntly that unless the United States changes its policy towards China, then war between the two countries is inevitable.

Bluff.

  • Like 2
Posted
3 minutes ago, placeholder said:

I think China's claim that the South China Sea is essentially Chinese property and the actions it has taken to lay claims to islands close to Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, and the Philippines  establish pretty clearly who the aggressor is. Also the attacks it has launched on India in the Himalayas.

Yes, perhaps, although it's not as clear cut as that. Trade and the US's position on Taiwan and other issues, the SCMP article from mid 2022 makes some good points:

 

https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/opinion/article/3180335/american-aggression-needs-be-reined-good-asia-and-world

  • Haha 1
Posted
2 hours ago, nigelforbes said:

I find it hard to understand who the aggressors are in all of this, there's some cause and effect involved.

The aggressors would be the countries that has been involved in wars.

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  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
2 hours ago, internationalism said:

around a year ago noam chomsky replied in an interview "If war between usa and china brakes up, we are doomed". That is a course for a full blown nuclear war.

China has now 400 warheads, within the next few years  planning for another 600. They are large strategic ones.

And they have now more intercontinental ballistic missiles, than the usa

https://fas.org/blogs/security/2023/02/stratcom-says-china-has-more-icbm-launchers-than-the-united-states/ 

 

yet the usa still don't know what "red line" is

 

I'm not religious just remember quotes everytime news comes like this it reminds of what was written  " Beware the yellow peril "  

I always thought it refered to the Sun. 

  • Haha 2
Posted

However painful it will be, the only thing which will solve the problem of a nuclear war is a real Cold War. Give the Chinese what they want - a real Cold war. (and while you are at it, suck up the pain and do it for Russia too.)

  • Like 2
Posted (edited)
46 minutes ago, Kwasaki said:

I'm not religious just remember quotes everytime news comes like this it reminds of what was written  " Beware the yellow peril "  

I always thought it refered to the Sun. 

if you mean the story book on which the usa presidents have to swear, it contain also a newer passages about sickles made into plowshares.

How about over 800 american military bases around the world can be interpreted in that passage context? How many military bases china has around the world? I don't know of any.

Possible that very same book says something about the red lines not to be crossed. 

It is religious hypocritical nuts with their book swearing zealous historical missions who often cause wars, and not the peace loving atheists 

Edited by internationalism
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Posted
10 minutes ago, internationalism said:

if you mean the story book on which the usa presidents have to swear it contain also a newer passages about sickles made into plowshares.

How over 800 american military bases around the world can be interpreted in that book context?

Possible that very same book says something about the red lines not to be crossed. 

It is religious hypocritical nuts with their zealous historical missions who often cause wars, and not the peace loving atheists 

Agree good call,  I'm more of an agnostic but still law of the jungle if it comes to it. 

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, spidermike007 said:

China is facing major financial issues, that could eventually collapse the entire CCP. The extent of the issues within the banking sector, and the amount of private debt is staggering. 

 

Ever since the deleveraging campaign started, investors have been disappointed in consistently expecting Beijing to bail them out. Even today, with the property sector’s woes mounting, investors are openly discussing what level of defaults or economic and financial stress will require Beijing to finally step in. But as losses are now plausible for investors in trust products, wealth management products, structured deposits, state-owned enterprises’ corporate bonds, banks themselves, and individual mortgages, there are not many asset classes remaining that carry unassailable promises of government support.

 

https://www.csis.org/analysis/chinas-slow-motion-financial-crisis-unfolding-expected

 

The current real estate crisis is the most severe the regime has met for a long time, but the recent new injection of liquidity may buy time and stabilize the market for a while. Even though, another round of instability is bound to occur. Many sectors could be the epicenter of the next tremor: it could be real estate again if it turns out that the faith of the public in ever-rising prices for property has been destroyed for good; or the financial sector, where there are many poorly managed small local banks and where some non-bank financial institutions are not as strongly regulated as banks; or the individual borrowers' segment (household debt has been rising too fast), or parts of the corporate segment (SOE debt is still growing); or perhaps, and most likely, the local governments, which suffer from a dramatic loss of revenues. 

 

https://www.institutmontaigne.org/en/analysis/chinas-next-financial-crisis-matter-when-not-if

 

 Manipulating statistics always backfire no matter who is in charge.  Xi and his CCP evidently think that cooking the books will not have any serious repercussions.  They might fool their countrymen, but will soon discover that breaking the basic rules of fiscal management is inviting disaster.

Edited by Hawaiian
correction
  • Like 1
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Posted
9 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

It does appear as if China eventually wants war with not only the US, but most of the Pacific region. They appear to want to regain the dominance and glory they experience in the long distant past. Their belligerence and arrogance knows no end. Xi is a vicious, megolamaniacal madman. 

 

The real problem for them, is the lack of a long range navy, and deep sea ports. Few nations (for now, anyway) seem to want to offer them the ability to re-supply or refuel, anywhere. I don't thing they are considered a reliable ally. 

 

The lack of visible, publicly available evidence of Chinese basing progress in Africa has fueled skepticism, with some commentators suggesting that concern about such basing efforts is overblown. This is understandable, but it overlooks the secretive nature and substantial timelines associated with these diplomatic and military negotiations. One just has to look closely enough and understand that China has a patient, long-term approach to achieving its global military ambitions.

 

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/08/16/china-military-bases-africa-navy-pla-geopolitics-strategy/

 

 

 

7 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

China is facing major financial issues, that could eventually collapse the entire CCP. The extent of the issues within the banking sector, and the amount of private debt is staggering. 

 

Ever since the deleveraging campaign started, investors have been disappointed in consistently expecting Beijing to bail them out. Even today, with the property sector’s woes mounting, investors are openly discussing what level of defaults or economic and financial stress will require Beijing to finally step in. But as losses are now plausible for investors in trust products, wealth management products, structured deposits, state-owned enterprises’ corporate bonds, banks themselves, and individual mortgages, there are not many asset classes remaining that carry unassailable promises of government support.

 

https://www.csis.org/analysis/chinas-slow-motion-financial-crisis-unfolding-expected

 

The current real estate crisis is the most severe the regime has met for a long time, but the recent new injection of liquidity may buy time and stabilize the market for a while. Even though, another round of instability is bound to occur. Many sectors could be the epicenter of the next tremor: it could be real estate again if it turns out that the faith of the public in ever-rising prices for property has been destroyed for good; or the financial sector, where there are many poorly managed small local banks and where some non-bank financial institutions are not as strongly regulated as banks; or the individual borrowers' segment (household debt has been rising too fast), or parts of the corporate segment (SOE debt is still growing); or perhaps, and most likely, the local governments, which suffer from a dramatic loss of revenues. 

 

https://www.institutmontaigne.org/en/analysis/chinas-next-financial-crisis-matter-when-not-if

 

China need to expand, it is the nature of continuous growing economy. The west suffer from double morality where the same have been done both peacefully and with arms.

 

Japan and South Korea is our strongest allies, but what the rest of the region? Africa, middle east? 

 

Europe's wealth depending on China as well, but our security depending on Nato. 

 

India is not interested in supporting Europe, and for good reasons, both the history and also their growth depending on keeping their hands out of a future conflicts with China even their border conflicts is still very much alive with China or should we say Xhina?

 

Thailand and Philippines? Can we be sure which side they will take in a real conflict? Vietnam, cambodia and laos? 

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