Chinese President Xi Jinping tells troops to focus on 'preparing for war'
During
an inspection of the People's Liberation Army Marine Corps in Chaozhou
City, Xinhua said Xi told the soldiers to "maintain a state of high
alert" and called on them to be "absolutely loyal, absolutely pure, and
absolutely reliable."
The
main purpose of Xi's visit to Guangdong was to deliver a speech
Wednesday commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Shenzhen Special
Economic Zone, which was established in 1980 to attract foreign capital
and played a vital role in helping China's economy become the
second-largest in the world.
But the military visit comes as tensions between China and the United States remain at their highest point in decades, with disagreements over Taiwan and the coronavirus pandemic creating sharp divisions between Washington and Beijing.
The White House notified US Congress Monday that it was planning to move ahead with the sale of three advanced weapon systems to Taiwan, according to a congressional aide, including the advanced High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS).
In
a stern response from Beijing, Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian
called on Washington to "immediately cancel any arms sales plans to
Taiwan" and cut all "US-Taiwan military ties."
Even
though Taiwan has never been controlled by China's ruling Communist
Party, authorities in Beijing insist the democratic, self-governing
island is an integral part of their territory, with Xi himself refusing to rule out military force to capture it if necessary.
Despite
the Chinese government's disapproval, relations between Washington and
Taipei have grown closer under the Trump administration. In August, US
Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar became the highest-level
US official to visit Taiwan in decades, when he traveled to the island
ostensibly to discuss the pandemic.
In
response, Beijing increased military drills around Taiwan. Almost 40
Chinese warplanes crossed the median line between the mainland and
Taiwan on September 18-19 -- one of several sorties the island's
President Tsai Ing-wen called a "threat of force."
In
a speech to the RAND Corporation on September 16, US Secretary of
Defense Mark Esper said China "cannot match the United States" in terms
of naval power and labeled Beijing a "malign influence."
"(China
and Russia) are using predatory economics, political subversion, and
military force in an attempt to shift the balance of power in their
favor, and often at the expense of others," he told the audience.
In early October, Esper announced his "Battle Force 2045" plan, which calls for an expanded and modernized US Navy of 500 manned and unmanned vessels by 2045.
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