美國海軍陸戰隊上尉 Walker Mills 投書 Military Review,
力主美軍在台島設立前線基地,用台島鄉民的命,去試探一下中國軍力虛實。
上尉那樣大的官,說話必定是一言頂天!
China Will 'Start a Just War' If U.S. Troops Return to Taiwan, State-affiliated Media Warns
The editor of China's state-backed Global Times newspaper has taken aim at an article published in the professional journal of the U.S. army which calls for a return of American forces to Taiwan.
Hu Xijn tweeted his disdain at the piece written by Capt. Walker D. Mills, from the U.S. Marine Corps in the latest edition of Military Review.
In the piece, Mills says that the regional balance of power in East Asia is shifting away from the United States and Taiwan and towards mainland China. In his view, this meant that the U.S. needed to consider basing ground forces on the island "if it is committed to defending Taiwanese sovereignty."
The article headlined "Deterring the Dragon," has Mills warning that the current power balance made a surprise attack on Taiwan "more likely" and believes that American leadership has to "face down" international pressure "against a deliberate and more global conflict with China."
"If Chinese forces can prevent U.S. forces from responding reflexively or immediately to PLA (People's Liberation Army) aggression, the United States will either accede to a quick PLA victory in a Taiwanese-mainland China conflict or be forced to wage a long, costly campaign to re-establish access to Taiwan with a far from certain outcome," Mills wrote.
Hu, who edits the paper owned by the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) official publication but reflects a more hawkish Chinese government view, tweeted the headline of the article with the comment: "I must warn people in the U.S. and Taiwan who hold this kind of thinking.
"Once they take the step of returning U.S. forces to Taiwan, the PLA will definitely start a just war to safeguard China's territorial integrity. China's Anti-Secession Law is a tiger with teeth," Hu added, referring to the law ratified in 2005 which formalizes Beijing's intentions to act if Taiwan declared independence.
The comments by Hu come during a week in which Taiwan warned China to back off after Beijing conducted large military drills and sent fighter jets over the midway point of the strategic Taiwan Strait.
Taiwan's defense ministry condemned what it called "harassment and threats" from the mainland, where the CCP wants to absorb the democratic island under its "One China" policy. Under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, the U.S. is legally obligated to help defend the island.
"I will not dismiss Hu Xijin's tweet. If the U.S. indeed deploys troops in Taiwan, it will be a sea change in U.S.-China relations and a trigger for U.S.-China military conflict," said Zhiqun Zhu, author of A Critical Decade: China's Foreign Policy 2008-2018.
"From Beijing's perspective, it will destroy the very foundation of PRC-U.S relations and violate the Anti-Secession Law, which will be a cause for war," he told Newsweek.