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I agree: it’s extremely important for the red air force to get permission from Taipei to conduct operations on the mainland.
I don't remember them using this specific taiwan rhetoric before. Is this the first time they've played this card? (Not the Taiwan is China card, the "US is landing military planes on our country without our permission" card.)
not certain. im not sure how often us military planes visit taiwan, it might be a novelty
Does anyone else remember back around 2007 when China refused a US aircraft carrier, I think it was the Kitty Hawk, access to Hong Kong during a long scheduled Thanksgiving Day visit to the port?
There has to be someone bobbing around on Twitter that has the skinny on this event. I believe it happened after a SecDef visit and they’ve been using this strategy ever since. Though I don’t recall it extending to Taiwan.
I read the first half thinking it seemed surprisingly reasonable and then I got to the part about Taiwan. Highly unfortunate.
Somewhat unrelated but a while back I requested some sources from you, sources that informed your opinions of contemporary China. You asked me to remind you in a couple of days but I kinda flopped. Asking again now!
ok yes. most of what I have found so far is modern history rather than contemporary books (these I trust somewhat less) in no particular order: Invisible Chinahttps://twitter.com/eigenrobot/status/1414445686259535877?s=19 …
I don't get their strategy...like, at all. "Don't land on our turf"; foreign planes do anyway; nothing happens; CCP looks weak; the end?
Never break kayfabe
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