'DANGEROUS FLASHPOINT'

War between US and China ‘more likely than EVER’ as nuclear superpowers clash over Taiwan

WAR between the US and China is more likely than ever as a growing crisis brews over Taiwan, experts have warned.

Beijing's increasingly aggressive actions are leading to a "dangerous flashpoint" towards a conflict that would probably draw in other major powers, according to an alarming report.

Advertisement
A Chinese aircraft carrier group and fighter jets put on a show of force in the South China Sea in 2018Credit: Reuters
The USA and China have the world's most powerful navies

Threats from China have been stepping up in recent months with troops put on invasion readiness and repeated incursions into Taiwanese air space.

Now a chilling report by the Council on Foreign Relations think tank warned a “severe crisis” could be brewing in 2021 following “intensifying political and economic pressure from China against Taiwan”.

The CFR's annual of foreign policy experts said the potential clash in the region has risen to a “top-tier conflict” for the first time in its 13-year history.

Experts said Taiwan “is becoming the most dangerous flashpoint in the world for a possible war that involves the United States, China, and probably other major powers”.

Advertisement

The report's authors says Joe Biden's administration must change and clarify its strategy to prevent all-out war in the region.

“The US strategic objective regarding Taiwan should be to preserve its political and economic autonomy, its dynamism as a free society, and US-allied deterrence – without triggering a Chinese attack on Taiwan,” they say.

Any open conflict between the nuclear superpowers could be devastating for both countries and others in the region.

Joe Biden, who took an anti-war stance in the election, said earlier this month he expects future rivalry with China will take the form of “extreme competition” rather than conflict.

Advertisement

Meanwhile yesterday China sent two coast guard vessels into Japan's territorial waters amid ongoing tensions over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Two armed ships - one equipped with a cannon - sailed close to the uninhabited Senkaku Islands, which are controlled by Japan by claimed by China.

One of two Chinese Coast Guard vessels that sailed into Japanese waters yesterdayCredit: Reuters

The provocative incursion came after China enacted a new "Coast Guard Law" -  also known as the "open fire" law - which allows sea forces to fire on any foreign vessel deemed a threat to its national sovereignty.

Advertisement

Last month Beijing sent dozens of bombers and fighter jets to Taiwan in a clear challenge to the US days after Joe Biden's administration.

Defence ministry spokesman Wu Qian hinted at a full-scale invasion if the autonomous island moves towards full independence.

He said: "We are seriously telling those Taiwan independence forces: those who play with fire will burn themselves, and Taiwan independence means war."

Biden responded by saying his support for Taiwan is "rock solid".

Advertisement

TEST OF RESOLVE

Meanwhile a bombshell White House document - declassified by Donald Trump in his final weeks - revealed a US plan to take on China directly if it attacked Taiwan.

Taiwan, a nation of 25million, split from Chinese control after the Second World War, and never surrendered 1949 following the Chinese Civil War.

It has been striving for independence ever since, but recently Beijing has been aggressively pursuing reunification and President Xi Jinping threatened to use force to achieve that goal.

China's repeated incursions into Taiwanese air space are designed to wear down its defence forces and test US resolve, said Justin Hastings, a professor in International Relations at the University of Sydney.

Advertisement
Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com