Dem Senator Might Be Court Martialed for Spewing Nutty Illegal Orders Nonsense About...
Former Antifa Member Reveals Why the Group Keeps Calling People Fascists
Are Other Republican Lawmakers on the Way Out?
Here's Why Democrats Are Winning School Board Races Again
Federal Judge Issues Predictable Ruling on Letitia James and James Comey
Marjorie Taylor Greene Just Said This About Running for President
Kyrsten Sinema Just Donned Her MAHA Hat
Follow the Yellow Journalism Brick Road
Mark Pocan Proves Medicare for All Is So Popular He Has to Lie...
Aftyn Behn Punts When Asked If She Still Wants to Defund the Police
Foreign Operatives Revealed: New X Feature Identifies Wave of Accounts Behind Misinformati...
DOGE Isn't Dead
Trump Moves to Designate Muslim Brotherhood a Foreign Terrorist Organization
Candace Owens Says the French Have Hired An Israeli Assassin to Kill Her
James Comey Responds to His Indictment Being Tossed
Tipsheet

Stationing Marines At US Embassy In Taiwan Would Be 'Invasion' Says Communist Newspaper

The Taipei Times, a media outlet of a Chinese Communist party, has reacted to unconfirmed reports that if U.S. Marines are stationed at Taiwan’s de facto station for diplomatic missions from Washington it would be an “invasion” of Chinese territory. 

Advertisement

“Taiwanese media outlets reported at the weekend that a small contingent of Marines will be posted at the newly-dedicated American Institute in Taiwan compound, which is due to begin operating formally in the fall,” reports CNS News.

This is not a new tactic; U.S. Marine Security Guards have been stationed at U.S. diplomatic stations around the world since WWII. 

In 1979 the U.S. switched recognition to the communist government in Beijing. The AIT serves as the embassy in Taipei. Similarly in the U.S. the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office serves as the Taiwan Embassy. 

There has been no official confirmation of reports that U.S. Marines will be stationed at the new AIT compound valued at $250 million, which was previously the headquarters of the U.S. Military Assistance Advisory Group, which was home to the AIT since the relationship changed in 1979. 

“As is the practice at our current location, a small number of American personnel detailed to AIT along with a larger number of locally-hired employees will provide security for the new office building in cooperation with the local authorities,” an AIT official told Taiwan’s Central News Agency. 

Advertisement

Related:

MEDIA TAIWAN

“Only U.S. embassies and consulates are guarded by Marines…Posting U.S. Marines to the AIT would mean a public U.S. declaration that the AIT is equivalent to a U.S. embassy or consulate instead of a non-governmental institution,” was written in a Global Times editorial. 

Taiwan has strong support in the U.S. Congress. In 1979, the same year that the Carter administration cut their diplomatic ties with Taiwan and switched to the mainland government in Beijing, Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act. This act commits that the U.S. provides the island with military assistance and protects it from unprovoked aggression.  

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement