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Russia Says Taiwan is Part of China as Two Powers Further Align Against U.S.

Dude you dont know our government, they take your money. But you get nothing for it in return, ask the germans.
You have been brainwashed into thinking western culture should dominate over others. Chinese whatever its political system is always an extension of thousands of years of Chinese culture. Its political system is 5% communism 95% chinese culture passed down from 5000years. You have been brainwashed to think warmonger western culture is the only culture/political identity that should dominate over all else. First we had anglo saxon feeling racially better than everyone else now they can't say that anymore so they say their culture/politics is better than everyone elses. Western anglo saxon culture is no more an extension of supremacism of anglo saxons in a more PC way then outright saying whites>everyone else.
 
Rubbish. China totally crushed Hongkong last year nd showed the world what Taiwan would have to expect to live under that kind of facism.

Not sure where you get your news from but Hong Kong is not crushed. What was crushed were the black thugs destroying Hong Kong in the name of "Democracy".
The future of Hong Kong is bright under the Greater Bay Area integration. 2 big events were recently announced in Hong Kong. If you have not heard about it I do not blame you.
First. An area, QianHai next to ShenZhen (City of the future) has been set aside for Hong Kong businesses.
Second. A new city called Northern Metropolis is being built to address Hong Kong housing crisis. It will house 2.5 million people.

Quote
The Qianhai zone, which was opened in 2010, will increase in area by around eight times, to around 120 square kilometers (46 square miles), from roughly 15 square kilometers currently, according to a document published by the official Xinhua News Agency Monday. The expansion is part of a plan to further integrate Hong Kong and Macau’s economies into the Greater Bay Area which includes Guangzhou, Shenzhen and other Pearl River Delta cities.

Quote
HONG KONG, Oct 6 (Reuters) - Hong Kong is at a new start for development under a national security law imposed last year, leader Carrie Lam said on Wednesday as she unveiled plans for tackling a long-standing housing shortage in the Chinese-ruled city.

Authorities in Hong Kong and Beijing have long blamed unaffordable housing in the former British colony for deep-rooted resentment that they say helped fuel anti-government protests in 2019.

At the centre of plans announced by Lam in her last policy address in this term of office is a Northern Metropolis on the border with the mainland's technology hub of Shenzhen, covering 300 square kilometres.

It will ultimately have some 926,000 homes - more than half to be newly built - for some 2.5 million people.


Hong Kong is also finally moving to high tech.
Quote
The economic basis of the metropolis will be up to 650,000 jobs, of which as many as 150,000 will be in the IT sector. As the former colony is largely concerned with financial services, these new industries are expected to help it to integrate better with the high-tech hub of Shenzhen.


And in other recent news.

Almost half of Hong Kong’s BN(O) migrants are still unemployed, struggle with language and workplace culture differences
  • New study finds only 18.5 per cent who moved to Britain under visa scheme had found full-time work for an employer as at end of August
  • But vast majority of survey participants aware that leaving Hong Kong behind would mean accepting a lower-paid job and changing industries


Note that Hong Hongers have a habit of returning back to Hong Kong. A colleague of mine has a cousin who returned to Hong Kong to a better paying job after 10 years (Yes, 10 years) in Canada.
 
Is Russia still a communist country? Russia's biggest mistake was that being tricked by US to give up communism.

Does it matter? They still haven't recognized Taiwan as legitimate since day one.

Saying they are "suddenly" announcing Taiwan is part of China is ridiculous.
 
It's best Taiwan , is taken back by China it will help the poor people in Taiwan
It's is no match , China can take all of Taiwan in 3 days

Best Taiwan joined China just like Hong Kong was returned back to Dragon China
 
Does it matter? They still haven't recognized Taiwan as legitimate since day one.

Saying they are "suddenly" announcing Taiwan is part of China is ridiculous.

Maybe because it's not a legitimate country? It is a Chinese island (recognized by both PRC and ROC as Chinese) that was illegally taken by the side that lost the Chinese civil war.

No country recognizes Taiwan as legitimate country or as rightful China. Not even the USA.
 
American/Indian trolls then: Russia stands with America! Russia and China on the verge of war :mad:
China: China is China 😘
Russia: China is China 😘
American/Indian trolls now: Communists are Nazis! China is Hitler! Russia needs America! Pff dont care! :mad:

As robotic and predictable the outburst and coping is, these people come up with the unthinkable dumbest and absurdest things to cry about China.
 
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Russia is a nobody these days. Weak.

Says Canada
Russia Says Taiwan is Part of China as Two Powers Further Align Against U.S.
BY TOM O'CONNOR
ON 10/12/21 AT 2:54 PM EDT
View attachment 784478
Soldiers of the Chinese People's Liberation Army and Russian Armed Forces participate in the opening ceremony of the "West/Interaction-2021" joint exercises on August 9 at the Qingtongxia Joint Tactical Training Base in Ningxia, China.

Russia has unambiguously stated its position that the self-ruling island of Taiwan is a part of the mainland-based People's Republic of China, as strategic partners Moscow and Beijing seek to further align their positions regarding geopolitical issues across the globe.

During his visit Tuesday to the Kazakh capital of Nur-Sultan, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov declared Moscow's stance on the issue.

"Russia, like the overwhelming majority of other countries, considers Taiwan to be part of the People's Republic of China," Lavrov said. "We have proceeded and will proceed from this premise in our foreign policy."

Only 14 countries today, along with the Vatican, have diplomatic relations with Taipei. Even the U.S. maintains only informal relations with the island nation since recognizing Beijing in 1979, three decades after the Communist victory in a civil war drove nationalists into exile across the Taiwan Strait. The Soviet Union quickly sided with the new fellow Communist power, though Moscow and Beijing would soon develop their own feud that lasted the remainder of the Cold War.

But today, China and Russia are closer than ever, and this year celebrated the 20th anniversary of their 2001 Treaty of Good-Neighborliness and Friendly Cooperation that redefined their relationship. These ties have grown especially warm in recent years as both found common ground in countering a mutual rival: the United States.

As the U.S. has turned its sights toward the Asia-Pacific region, especially since former President Donald Trump's administration, Lavrov and other Russian officials have more readily criticized U.S. coalition-building with Australia, India and Japan under the banner of a "free and open Indo-Pacific."

Lavrov has recently been voicing his opposition to those efforts.

"The Indo-Pacific concept is aimed at breaking up this system that relied on the need to respect the indivisibility of security," Lavrov told a defense and foreign policy conference last week, "and has openly proclaimed that its chief objective is containing China."

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian praised Lavrov's remarks days later, and on Monday also lauded Russian military expert Ivan Konovalov's criticism over the behavior of U.S. and partnered navies in the Asia-Pacific region after a U.S. submarine collided with a still-unidentified object in the South China Sea.

During that same press briefing, Zhao shared his position on what he saw as Washington's unhelpful actions targeting Moscow in Europe, where a new Russia-Germany gas pipeline known as Nord Stream 2 has drawn criticism from U.S. officials concerned about energy independence.

Over the weekend, Lavrov said the U.S. "is not hiding it and is straightforward" about pitting Russia and European powers against one another, and Zhao took the opportunity to support Moscow's stance on Monday.

"It is well-known that the Nord Stream 2 project shows energy complementarity between Russia and Europe, and would help resolve the European energy crisis," Zhao said. "The U.S., however, to serve its own geopolitical interests and monopolize the European energy market, spares no effort in disrupting and hobbling relevant projects to undermine the interests of Russia and Europe and their cooperation. This wins no support."

He then linked the U.S. approach on the pipeline with that which it took in the Asia-Pacific, saying "the U.S. is adept at politicizing issues in all means and would hurt others indiscriminately, including its allies and partners, for its own interests."

He argued that more nations are beginning to share this perception.

"We believe more countries, with their eyes wide open, will oppose the U.S. hegemonic approach featuring politicization and a sense of supremacy in pursuit of self-interests at the expense of others," Zhao said.

However, as both Beijing and Moscow's relations with Washington have deteriorated, each has attempted to stabilize its ties with the top world power.

On Tuesday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov met with U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland in Moscow, where an attempt by the Russians was said to have been made to roll back tit-for-tat sanctions targeting one another's diplomatic missions.

"The officials discussed the status and prospects of bilateral relations," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a readout. "They paid special attention to the operation of the diplomatic missions on each other's territory. Mr. Ryabkov emphasized that the hostile anti-Russian actions will not remain unanswered although Moscow does not seek to further escalate tensions. He suggested removing all restrictions that both sides have introduced in the past few years."

And Ryabkov warned that continued tensions would only serve to make life more difficult for both parties.

"Ms Nuland was told that the continuation of Washington's line toward confrontation on the bilateral agenda and in the context of acute international and regional problems can only result in the further degradation of Russian-US relations," according to the Russian side. "It is necessary to adopt a realistic approach and build bilateral ties on the principles of equality and mutual consideration of each other's interests."

When it comes to China, two notable interactions have occurred over the past month. Last month, Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Joe Biden spoke via telephone, and last Wednesday Chinese Communist Party Central Foreign Affairs Commission Director Yang Jiechi met virtually with U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan.

Tensions appear to have somewhat eased on the surface amid this communication, but core areas of contention exist, with Taiwan identified by both sides as the primary issue.

Under both Trump and Biden, the U.S. has gradually expanded its informal support for Taiwan, including in the security realm. Taipei officials, such as Foreign Minister Joseph Wu, have also increased their ambitions for challenging the "one-China" near-consensus that exists among the international community.

Responding to Wu's arguments that United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 that passed Taipei's U.N. seat to Beijing in 1971 does not preclude Taiwan from participating in the U.N, Zhao said during his daily press briefing on Friday "the remarks of some politician in Taiwan are just nonsense."

"There is only one China in the world, the Taiwan region is an inalienable part of the Chinese territory, and the government of the People's Republic of China is the sole legal government representing the whole of China," Zhao said. "This is a basic fact recognized by the international community. Our position of adhering to the one-China principle will remain unchanged; our attitude of rejecting 'two Chinas', 'one China, one Taiwan' and 'Taiwan independence' is not to be challenged, and our resolve of upholding national sovereignty and territorial integrity is unswerving."

Zhao also emphasized that Taiwan was a province of China and therefore not qualified from participating independently in international organizations such as the U.N. And he reiterated Beijing's commitment to reintegrating Taiwan under mainland rule, a pledge Xi has vowed to achieve through diplomacy or force, if neccesary.

"We believe that the just cause of the Chinese government and Chinese people to uphold national sovereignty and territorial integrity, oppose secession and achieve reunification will continue to win understanding and support of the U.N. and its member states," Zhao said.

That same day, the Chinese military's official online portal carried a commentary by the official military newspaper, the People's Liberation Army Daily, underlining the need to achieve reunification.

"The Chinese People's Liberation Army has firm will, full confidence, and sufficient capabilities to thwart all external interference and separatist acts of 'Taiwan independence' and resolutely defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity," the commentary read. "If the 'Taiwan independence' separatist forces dared to split Taiwan from China in any name and by any means, the People's Army will resolutely crush it at all costs."

The commentary also argued for an even more urgent need to focus on this point.

"The officers and soldiers of the entire army must increase their sense of anxiety and responsibility for their missions, focus on fighting, focus on all tasks, and have the ambition to strengthen the army and rejuvenate the army," the commentary read. "The high level of vigilance ensures that when the party and the people need it, they will come when they are called, they will be able to fight, and they will be victorious."

Successive U.S. administrations have deliberately avoided making any overt pledges to defend Taiwan in the event of Chinese military action.

Asked about the U.S. planned response to a hypothetical Chinese incursion a day after his online talks with Jang, Sullivan replied, "Let me just say this, we are going to take action now to try to prevent that day from ever coming to pass."

China and Russia have no formal military alliance, and both sides have said there were no plans to adopt such a framework, even as their defense ties continue to increase. But the two nations have pursued an increasing number of joint exercises, including large-scale drills in August focused on counterterrorism in northwestern China at a time of growing instability as U.S. troops left a two-decade conflict in neighboring Afghanistan, one of a number of regional and international issues on which Beijing and Moscow have stepped up collaboration.

And in yet another display of aligned interests, the two countries released a joint statement on the Biological Weapons Convention, in which "they emphasize that the United States' and its allies' overseas military biological activities (over 200 U.S. biological laboratories are deployed outside its national territory, which function in opaque and non-transparent manner) cause serious concerns and questions among the international community over its compliance with the BWC."

This point has been especially promoted by China since the emergence of U.S. suspicions regarding a potential role played by the Wuhan Virological Institute in the outbreak of COVID-19, a disease first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan. A U.S. intelligence report commissioned by President Biden came to an inconclusive finding as to whether the pathogen may have appeared naturally or accidentally leaked out of the facility, but the probe has only further damaged U.S.-China relations.

As his first year in office draws to a close, Biden has already met with Russian President Vladimir Putin during a June bilateral summit Geneva, and discussions are underway for a potential virtual talk with Xi, though no official date has yet been confirmed.

"I don't have any update at this point," White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Tuesday. "It's just something that we're working through and in discussions about at a staff level."



Most countries in the world recognize Taiwan as a part of China. This is nothing new.
 
Declining white demographic america can not hope to stand against True Quad (Russia/China/Pak/Iran). The West is in massive decline every year and Indians plus their white masters who are being breeded out in their own country are crying in their beds at night.
This quad is too strong for the other quad.
 
Doesnt change the fact that Taiwan is independend and will stay that way. Nobody who comes from democracy wants live in a tyranny like China.

there are plenty of people from democracy living in China as we speak, as students, employees, tourists....
 

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