Social Media Is Having Way Too Much Fun With the 12-Ton KitKat Heist
Four Dangerous State Bills Paving the Path to Infanticide
Trump Just Made His Harshest Threat Against NATO. Here's Why It Could Be...
Trump Just Made a Major Announcement About 'Ceasefire' With Iran
FBI Agents Who Investigated Trump Sue After Being Fired
This British Academic Tried Shaming Critics of Islam. It Did Not Go Well...
This Georgetown Professor Has a Nasty Message for Those Concerned With Islamic Rape...
Another Illegal Immigrant Has Been Arrested for Murder in Fairfax County, Virginia
Bystanders Save Chicago Woman From Attack by Career Criminal
California Sues The Trump Administration To Block an Executive Order Targeting Mail-In Bal...
Pro-Communist Streamer Hasan Piker Is Shocked by Cuba’s Poverty, but Blames the US...
Here Is How SCOTUS Is Leaning on Trump's Birthright Citizenship Case
Victor Davis Hanson Reveals He Was Approached by Fang-Fang, He Simply Wasn't Stupid...
Don Lemon Thinks Fixing America Is Easy, He Just Needs to Be President
Rubio Drops a Brutal Reality Check on the World About the Strait of...
Tipsheet

McCaul Issues a Warning From Taiwan Amid Escalating CCP Aggression

McCaul Issues a Warning From Taiwan Amid Escalating CCP Aggression
Spencer Brown / Townhall

This story is brought to you by the direct support of our VIP members. If you're not a member yet, please consider becoming a Townhall VIP member.

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan's new Foreign Minister Lin Chia-Lung warned his country is in a "critical time" following the inauguration of its new President, Lai Ching-te last week that saw the Chinese Communist Party escalate its harassment of the island with multiple days of military exercises simulating a blockade of the Republic of China.

Advertisement

Foreign Minister Lin's remarks at the Taipei Guest House as driving rain lashed the capital city came during his first meeting with a delegation from the United States since assuming the post as Taiwan's top diplomat amid a seemingly deteriorating situation in the Taiwan Strait. 

Led by House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-TX), Lin called the bipartisan delegation's visit a "powerful gesture" showing "solidarity" as China ramps up its aggression aimed at Taiwan. 

"We are eager to work with the U.S. Congress to continue to strengthen cooperation between Taiwan and the United States and to advance our rock-solid partnership," Lin declared. 

While the CCP attempts to undermine President Lai and his government as "dangerous" separatists working for Taiwan's independence, Lin called the peaceful transfer of power "another milestone in Tawian's democracy" and praised McCaul's work to "advance the Taiwan-U.S. relationship and strengthen Taiwan's self-defense capabilities" to "safeguard Taiwan's democracy and freedom."

In his remarks at the meeting with Minister Lin, McCaul noted Monday's Memorial Day holiday in the United States. Saying he couldn't help but think of his own father "who served in what we call the 'Greatest Generation' who fought at the ultimate time of peril in World War II when both Europe and the Pacific were under fire from dictators — aggressive ones — trying to take over the world."

Advertisement

Related:

CHINA

"Fast-forward to today, and there are so many parallels between then and the events that we see today," McCaul emphasized. To address the unholy alliance developing between evil empires today — including China, Iran, Russia, and North Korea — McCaul said "deterrence is key," again emphasizing President Ronald Reagan's "peace through strength" policies. "We have to provide that deterrence here," McCaul said of Taiwan. 

"You don't have peace and prosperity without strength and deterrence," warned McCaul. The absence of strength "invites aggression, conflict, and war. We've seen it in history over and over again."

To that end, McCaul said that the United States needs to "provide all defense articles as instructed in the Taiwan Relations Act" and continue supporting the Republic of China's deterrence with aid packages such as the recently passed emergency Indo-Pacific security supplemental bill appropriating $2 billion for Taiwan — an additional investment on top of a 2022 bill allocating $2 billion annually for Taiwan from 2023 to 2027. The end year for that bill was set to match the year by which Xi Jinping told his military to be prepared for an invasion of Taiwan. 

Advertisement

In Xi Jinping's China, "there is no freedom, there is no democracy, and the people have no power whatsoever — they're subjugated to his authority," McCaul emphasized of the neighbor to Taiwan's north. 

"Why is Taiwan important?," he McCaul queried rhetorically before answering. "It's the people, it's democracy, it's freedom, it's prosperity, it's what you bring in science and technology and innovation — it's because the people of Taiwan are just like the people of the United States." 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos