Berliner Boersenzeitung - China's Pelosi bombast shows insecurity over Taiwan: analysts

EUR -
AED 4.092053
AFN 75.758464
ALL 98.318494
AMD 431.477408
ANG 2.007419
AOA 1050.590845
ARS 1079.283638
AUD 1.60808
AWG 2.00537
AZN 1.886799
BAM 1.946799
BBD 2.249022
BDT 133.080239
BGN 1.956238
BHD 0.419934
BIF 3222.517405
BMD 1.114094
BND 1.427202
BOB 7.724357
BRL 6.078834
BSD 1.11385
BTN 93.082648
BWP 14.503944
BYN 3.645247
BYR 21836.245857
BZD 2.24522
CAD 1.506088
CDF 3191.879457
CHF 0.941716
CLF 0.036244
CLP 1000.077729
CNY 7.81827
CNH 7.804313
COP 4671.14064
CRC 578.923447
CUC 1.114094
CUP 29.523496
CVE 110.515343
CZK 25.209832
DJF 197.996897
DKK 7.454449
DOP 67.347421
DZD 147.36013
EGP 53.781753
ERN 16.711413
ETB 132.79749
FJD 2.426775
FKP 0.848448
GBP 0.832512
GEL 3.047053
GGP 0.848448
GHS 17.52457
GIP 0.848448
GMD 77.986159
GNF 9617.421569
GTQ 8.618232
GYD 232.915247
HKD 8.659537
HNL 27.707068
HRK 7.574739
HTG 146.791335
HUF 397.279854
IDR 16907.660335
ILS 4.14013
IMP 0.848448
INR 93.348336
IQD 1459.463371
IRR 46903.364821
ISK 150.524847
JEP 0.848448
JMD 175.187814
JOD 0.789448
JPY 159.727126
KES 143.718313
KGS 93.810851
KHR 4528.792738
KMF 492.01185
KPW 1002.684127
KRW 1466.481239
KWD 0.340144
KYD 0.928209
KZT 535.922255
LAK 24599.199752
LBP 99767.133418
LKR 329.984374
LRD 215.88358
LSL 19.055617
LTL 3.289631
LVL 0.673904
LYD 5.280893
MAD 10.799193
MDL 19.420214
MGA 5070.242798
MKD 61.436246
MMK 3618.534427
MNT 3785.691961
MOP 8.910703
MRU 44.246227
MUR 51.134218
MVR 17.112499
MWK 1934.067785
MXN 21.909997
MYR 4.59397
MZN 71.162779
NAD 19.050076
NGN 1859.969262
NIO 40.992704
NOK 11.754128
NPR 148.932436
NZD 1.750359
OMR 0.428872
PAB 1.11385
PEN 4.143275
PGK 4.456629
PHP 62.505698
PKR 309.38249
PLN 4.281221
PYG 8680.865505
QAR 4.056139
RON 4.977334
RSD 117.054544
RUB 103.482721
RWF 1483.973443
SAR 4.179714
SBD 9.238564
SCR 15.174498
SDG 670.123501
SEK 11.312646
SGD 1.430508
SHP 0.848448
SLE 25.454047
SLL 23361.992103
SOS 636.147174
SRD 34.203247
STD 23059.500104
SVC 9.745941
SYP 2799.19497
SZL 19.050869
THB 36.051945
TJS 11.862867
TMT 3.89933
TND 3.38629
TOP 2.609321
TRY 38.100124
TTD 7.571992
TWD 35.364137
TZS 3041.477198
UAH 45.913825
UGX 4109.998128
USD 1.114094
UYU 46.455222
UZS 14190.779418
VEF 4035864.682313
VES 41.066239
VND 27367.723443
VUV 132.267499
WST 3.116637
XAF 652.938252
XAG 0.03584
XAU 0.000423
XCD 3.010895
XDR 0.822
XOF 655.647438
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.885581
ZAR 19.203201
ZMK 10028.182034
ZMW 29.490318
ZWL 358.73787
  • RBGPF

    4.6500

    64.75

    +7.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.05

    +0.14%

  • CMSC

    -0.0528

    24.72

    -0.21%

  • BCC

    -0.5100

    140.98

    -0.36%

  • SCS

    0.3400

    13.49

    +2.52%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    40.88

    +0.42%

  • NGG

    -0.0600

    69.67

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    24.78

    -1.21%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    71.17

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    -0.1000

    47.46

    -0.21%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    34.8

    -1.12%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    13.67

    +0.66%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    10.02

    -0.7%

  • BTI

    -0.2600

    36.58

    -0.71%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    77.91

    +0.37%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    31.39

    -0.1%

China's Pelosi bombast shows insecurity over Taiwan: analysts
China's Pelosi bombast shows insecurity over Taiwan: analysts / Photo: Handout - CNA/AFP

China's Pelosi bombast shows insecurity over Taiwan: analysts

China's tough rhetoric around US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan reveals deep insecurity about Washington's shifting stance towards the island, analysts told AFP, as well as efforts to distract from economic woes at home.

Text size:

The 82-year-old lawmaker landed in Taipei late Tuesday night -- becoming the highest-profile American official to set foot there in 25 years.

But for days before the military plane carrying her landed at Songshan Airport, Beijing wielded increasingly bellicose language, issuing threats of "consequences" and making demonstrations of military force.

China held live-fire drills across the strait from Taiwan over the weekend, while Hu Xijin, former editor-in-chief of nationalist tabloid Global Times, suggested that Beijing could "forcibly dispel Pelosi's plane" or even "shoot them down".

But analysts told AFP that beneath the bombast there is insecurity, with China's rulers threatened by what they perceive as increasing efforts by the US and Western allies to foster relationships with Taiwan and encourage the island's independence.

At the same time, Chinese President Xi Jinping is anxious to project strength against the United States -- its greatest military and economic rival -- ahead of a key political meeting expected to secure him an unprecedented third term.

- Show of strength -

Last week, Xi warned his US counterpart Joe Biden in a call that the United States shouldn't "play with fire" when it comes to Taiwan.

The aggressive message serves to reinforce the Chinese leader's domestic image ahead of his expected political coronation at the 20th Party Congress this autumn, said Steve Tsang, director of the SOAS China Institute in London.

"As a strongman leader, the last thing he would want to show is any sign of weakness," Tsang told AFP.

Drumming up nationalist sentiment also serves to distract from China's slowing economy and growing public impatience with Beijing's harsh zero-Covid restrictions that have dampened the mood in what would have been a jubilant year for Xi.

"For the Chinese communist party, there are two pillars of legitimacy -- economic growth and nationalism," Willy Lam, a Hong Kong-based Chinese politics analyst, told AFP.

Headlines and aggressive messaging on Taiwan have been "diverting the attention of the Chinese public away from economic problems", he said.

- Dire strait -

There are also deep-rooted frustrations in Beijing over Washington's shifting attitudes toward Taiwan.

China considers the self-ruled, democratic island as its territory and has vowed to one day reclaim it, by force if necessary.

Beijing's sabre-rattling stems in large part from a perception that the United States' engagement with Taiwan has become more proactive and threatening to the mainland's interests in recent years, said Li Mingjiang, associate professor of international relations at Singapore's Nanyang Technological University.

Since the Trump administration, some in Beijing believe Washington appears to have become increasingly "supportive of Taiwan independence", Li told AFP.

Chinese diplomats have complained that the United States is no longer honouring what it claims is a binding tenet of bilateral relations, the "One China" policy, pointing to arms deals between Washington and Taipei.

Visits to Taiwan by politicians from regional neighbours as well as Europe and the US have also increased.

Xi is "getting very impatient and irritated by the fact that in the past year senior leaders... not just from the US but from Japan, the EU and so forth have been visiting Taiwan," Lam, the Hong Kong-based analyst, said.

At the same time, there is a greater sense of distinctive Taiwanese identity among the younger generation.

Combined with the ruling Democratic Progressive Party's pro-independence agenda, this means that to Beijing's elite "the whole Taiwan issue does not really look positive," Li said.

Chinese leaders are turning to fiery rhetoric to "discourage the development of cross-strait relations and US-Taiwan relations from becoming even more challenging for mainland China," he said.

- 'The last thing Xi wants' -

Despite all its aggressive posturing, few believe Beijing wants an active military conflict against the United States and its allies over Taiwan -- just yet.

"The last thing Xi wants is an accidental war ignited," Titus Chen, an associate professor of political science at the National Sun Yat-Sen University in Taiwan, said.

Multiple scholars noted that Beijing's military capabilities still lag behind Washington's, and told AFP that recent military drills, while clearly intended to be intimidating, fell short of targeting areas immediately adjacent to the Taiwanese coast.

"Xi's Plan B would be to explain away, via (Chinese Communist Party) propaganda and thought control system, the sense of embarrassment or humiliation that Pelosi's Taiwan visit brings to Beijing," Chen said.

(H.Schneide--BBZ)