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  1. #676
    Thailand Expat

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    Quote Originally Posted by Backspin View Post
    ^ Tankers will be too easy of targets. They will be parked.

    Anyway, wont be that long till the war starts. We can only assume at this point that this is what the US wants. And is actively trying to provoke.

    Taiwan found to have taken part in US multinational military exercise

    Taiwan found to have taken part in US multinational military exercise | NHK WORLD-JAPAN News

    NHK has learned that troops from Taiwan took part in a US-sponsored multi-national military exercise held in the mid-western state of Michigan for about one month from late July.


    Sources have revealed that Taiwanese troops took part in Operation Northern Strike, an annual multi-national exercise hosted by the Michigan National Guard.
    Do your bosses at Central Command know you’re using their computers, for personal use?

  2. #677
    Thailand Expat helge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Backspin View Post
    Anyway, wont be that long till the war starts.
    Let's hope that you are wrong in your prediction...this time

  3. #678
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Taiwan’s political and military leadership are all hands on deck in anticipation of a cyberwar with Beijing— and Washington is ready to back their networks up, a senior White House official said at the POLITICO Tech Summit on Wednesday.

    “From President Tsai [Ing-wen] on down, they’re very focused on increasing the cybersecurity and digital resilience of Taiwan,” said Anne Neuberger, the deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technologies.

    Neuberger, who has generally been tight-lipped on Taiwan, added the island is well aware of China’s formidable cyber capabilities, especially when it comes to cyberattacks and espionage. And things are only looking to get more tense in the region, with Taiwan preparing for a presidential election in January.

    To provide timely support to Taiwan during a major cyberattack, Neuberger said the U.S. will send its best teams to help hunt down the attackers, the same approach typically used to help global allies in cyberspace.

    “The support we typically provide international partners around the world would be putting our best teams to hunt on their most sensitive networks to help identify any current intrusions and to help remediate and make those networks as strong as possible.”

    Neuberger also said the U.S. is working closely with Taiwan through ongoing military tabletop games and exercises to prepare for any potential crippling cyberattacks.

    Conflict in Taiwan — both cyber and on land — is a growing concern for Washington and its allies, even as China has repeatedly warned the U.S. against intervening.
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  4. #679
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Taiwan seeks "peaceful coexistence" with China with free and unrestricted interaction but the island will be democratic for generations to come, President Tsai Ing-wen said in her last national day speech on Tuesday.

    Taiwan, claimed by China as its own territory, has come under increasing military and political pressure from Beijing, including two major sets of Chinese war games near the island since August of last year, heightening fears of a conflict which would have global ramifications.

    Tsai, who cannot stand again as president at elections in January after two terms in office, has repeatedly offered talks with China, which has rejected them as it views her as a separatist.

    Speaking in front of the presidential office, Tsai said the strength of international support for Taiwan had reached an "unprecedented height".

    "Since this is a time we can now face the world with confidence and resolve, we can also be calm and self-assured in facing China, creating conditions for peaceful coexistence and future developments across the Taiwan Strait," she added.

    Tsai said it was her duty to safeguard Taiwan's sovereignty and its democratic, free way of life, seeking "free, unrestricted, and unburdened interactions" between Taiwan and China's people.

    Differences between Taiwan and China must be resolved peacefully, and maintaining the status quo is "critical" to ensuring peace, she added, to a big round of applause.

    There was no immediate response from China's Taiwan Affairs Office.

    The parade part of the event featured dancers, athletes just returned from the Asian Games in China's Hangzhou where Taiwan won 19 gold medals, as well as soldiers marching in close formation.

    A formation of five of Taiwan's new advanced jet trainer, the AT-5 Brave Eagle, flew over the venue, underscoring Tsai's efforts to boost domestic weapons development, that includes submarines.

    'DEMOCRATIC AND FREE'

    In the face of China's threats, Taiwan has been heartened by support from fellow democracies, especially the United States and its allies whose lawmakers and occasionally officials have flocked to Taipei, defying Chinese anger.

    "With confidence, we will show the world that the Taiwanese people are dignified, independent, warm, and kind. The Taiwanese people are happy to be people of the world and will be a democratic and free people for generations to come," Tsai said.

    Tsai looked back at her major policy achievements since she took office in 2016, including marriage equality, a first for Asia, to an audience that included Canadian and Japanese lawmakers and former Australian prime minister Scott Morrison, as well as ordinary Taiwanese.

    Beijing says Taiwan's government must accept that both China and Taiwan belong to "one China", which Tsai has refused to do.

    Taiwan celebrates Oct. 10 as its national day, marking an uprising in 1911 that ended China's last imperial dynasty and ushered in the Republic of China.

    The republican government fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong's Communists, who set up the People's Republic of China.

    The Republic of China remains Taiwan's formal name, though the government tends to stylise it as the Republic of China, Taiwan, to distinguish it from the government in Beijing.

    ________

    President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) used her National Day address Tuesday to underline Taiwan's resolve to defend its sovereignty, saying there was "no room for compromise" when it came to preserving the country's free and democratic way of life.

    The following is the full text of her speech, titled "A calm and confident Taiwan: Moving our country forward, making the world a better place": Full text of President Tsai Ing-wen's National Day address - Focus Taiwan

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