Breaking News: US Delivers First F-16V Fighter Jet to Taiwan to Boost Air Defense Against China Threats

No, you said " most countries" recognize Taiwan was a country, you didn't say support or not, otherwise there would be no argument cause I know many western countries secretly do support Taiwan, I won't lie shamelessly like you.
So people lie but will admit and correct their mistakes after being pointed out or debunked, people like you are habitual liars, will keep lying forever shameless even after being debunked, there's no sense of human honor, honesty and integrity in such beings.
you do know the reality but you how many major western countries oppose One China policy secretly, keep sh!ttting in your pants, keep living in your utopia
 
you do know the reality but you how many major western countries oppose One China policy secretly, keep sh!ttting in your pants, keep living in your utopia

Do you have to be this shameless, what have we been arguing about?

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Do you have to be this shameless, what have we been arguing about?

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微信图片_20250404104919.png

微信图片_20250401122614.png
You're shameless bot not me keep repeating same crap again and again, everybody know west by saying they support One Chine policy but by act they are not supporting 50+ year old UN resolution
 
You're shameless bot not me keep repeating same crap again and again, everybody know west by saying they support One Chine policy but by act they are not supporting 50+ year old UN resolution
You are such a pathetic liar, so shameless, read the date of the report

Donald Trump’s pick for Beijing envoy affirms US commitment to one-China policy​

By ROBERT DELANEY
Saturday, 05 Apr 2025

3247902.webp



President Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Beijing said on Thursday that the US leader’s strategy for China would involve “some pain” and claimed that allies must do more to counter the Asian country.

Speaking in a confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, David Perdue, a former Republican senator representing Georgia, also affirmed Washington’s commitment to a one-China policy.

“We’re going to continue to honour the one-China policy, as stated in the Taiwan Relations Act, also backed up by the three communiques and the six assurances,” Perdue said.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The Taiwan Relations Act was signed by then-president Jimmy Carter shortly after Washington switched official diplomatic relations from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, and obligates the US government to support Taiwan’s defence capabilities.

However, it does not specifically articulate a one-China policy, which is spelled out in the first of the communiques – agreements between the US and China that formalised the diplomatic switch.

Perdue’s reference to the “six assurances” relates to commitments that Washington made to Taipei in 1982 that it would disregard Beijing’s opposition to US arms sales to the island.

Most countries, including the US, do not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but Washington opposes any attempt to take the island by force and remains committed to supplying it with weapons.

Asked several times about what Trump’s administration will do to reverse the migration of supply chains for critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, shipbuilding and other industries to China, Perdue said: “President Trump is all over that. The starting conversation [is] with trade. There are going to be many others.”

Trump said last month that Chinese President Xi Jinping would visit the US in the “not too distant future”, although that has not been confirmed in Beijing.

Later in the hearing, when queried again about supply chains, Perdue lauded Trump for “stepping up and trying to communicate a very difficult strategy that may not be as easy as everybody thinks it will be on the American people”.

“There will be some pain in executing what we have to do to stand up and defend our own freedom,” he added.

Although he did not explicitly link the “pain” to disruptions expected as a result of the tariffs announced by Trump a day earlier, Perdue was speaking as global markets swooned on expectations that the punitive levies would stoke inflation and curb growth.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1,600 points on Thursday.

China was America’s second largest import source last year in terms of value, which was pegged at US$439 billion, according to US government data. That was just behind Mexico, which shipped goods worth a total of US$506 billion.

Trump hit China with a 34 per cent import tariff, on top of the 20 per cent punitive levies laid on since he returned to office in January. Along with Canada – America’s third largest import source – Mexico was spared in Trump’s worldwide tariff salvo.

Perdue was grilled by Jeanne Shaheen, the Senate committee’s senior Democrat, and other members of her party on Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of foreign aid in the form of a spending freeze for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

They asked repeatedly how to prevent China from strengthening its influence in the Global South, Eastern Europe and other regions in the absence of US support, to which Perdue stressed the need to work with “allies”, whom he expected to help in this regard.

“The parties that are not being discussed here are the other democratic countries in the world. Where’s the EU in this we’re talking about ... taxpayer money. How much is coming out of the UK, out of the EU and other democratic countries?” he said.

“We have to face the reality that this is a coalescing need that we have in the democratic, free world to stand up to these types of challenges.”

https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplu...-commitment-to-one-china-policy#goog_rewarded
 
You are such a pathetic liar, so shameless, read the date of the report

Donald Trump’s pick for Beijing envoy affirms US commitment to one-China policy​

By ROBERT DELANEY
Saturday, 05 Apr 2025

3247902.webp



President Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Beijing said on Thursday that the US leader’s strategy for China would involve “some pain” and claimed that allies must do more to counter the Asian country.

Speaking in a confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, David Perdue, a former Republican senator representing Georgia, also affirmed Washington’s commitment to a one-China policy.

“We’re going to continue to honour the one-China policy, as stated in the Taiwan Relations Act, also backed up by the three communiques and the six assurances,” Perdue said.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The Taiwan Relations Act was signed by then-president Jimmy Carter shortly after Washington switched official diplomatic relations from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, and obligates the US government to support Taiwan’s defence capabilities.

However, it does not specifically articulate a one-China policy, which is spelled out in the first of the communiques – agreements between the US and China that formalised the diplomatic switch.

Perdue’s reference to the “six assurances” relates to commitments that Washington made to Taipei in 1982 that it would disregard Beijing’s opposition to US arms sales to the island.

Most countries, including the US, do not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but Washington opposes any attempt to take the island by force and remains committed to supplying it with weapons.

Asked several times about what Trump’s administration will do to reverse the migration of supply chains for critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, shipbuilding and other industries to China, Perdue said: “President Trump is all over that. The starting conversation [is] with trade. There are going to be many others.”

Trump said last month that Chinese President Xi Jinping would visit the US in the “not too distant future”, although that has not been confirmed in Beijing.

Later in the hearing, when queried again about supply chains, Perdue lauded Trump for “stepping up and trying to communicate a very difficult strategy that may not be as easy as everybody thinks it will be on the American people”.

“There will be some pain in executing what we have to do to stand up and defend our own freedom,” he added.

Although he did not explicitly link the “pain” to disruptions expected as a result of the tariffs announced by Trump a day earlier, Perdue was speaking as global markets swooned on expectations that the punitive levies would stoke inflation and curb growth.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1,600 points on Thursday.

China was America’s second largest import source last year in terms of value, which was pegged at US$439 billion, according to US government data. That was just behind Mexico, which shipped goods worth a total of US$506 billion.

Trump hit China with a 34 per cent import tariff, on top of the 20 per cent punitive levies laid on since he returned to office in January. Along with Canada – America’s third largest import source – Mexico was spared in Trump’s worldwide tariff salvo.

Perdue was grilled by Jeanne Shaheen, the Senate committee’s senior Democrat, and other members of her party on Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of foreign aid in the form of a spending freeze for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

They asked repeatedly how to prevent China from strengthening its influence in the Global South, Eastern Europe and other regions in the absence of US support, to which Perdue stressed the need to work with “allies”, whom he expected to help in this regard.

“The parties that are not being discussed here are the other democratic countries in the world. Where’s the EU in this we’re talking about ... taxpayer money. How much is coming out of the UK, out of the EU and other democratic countries?” he said.

“We have to face the reality that this is a coalescing need that we have in the democratic, free world to stand up to these types of challenges.”

https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplu...-commitment-to-one-china-policy#goog_rewarded
You're definitely Chinese AI bot not a human, Keep repeating this sh!t again and again, by ACT USA doesn't care One China policy anymore
 
Thank you for taking the time to respond.

We will have to agree to disagree.

- all of Taiwan is in range of rocket artillery. These can be mobilised relatively quickly and Taiwan doesn't have sufficient land mass to constantly mobilise assets.

- naval blockade....Ukraine scenario is different due to a) greater land mass b) unprecedented support from Europe via land routes. Their A2A stocks will deplete quickly.
- recent images from nevetim indicate good damage following TP2. China won't limit its strikes, unlike Iran. No time to repair...
- You think USA will actively intervene? It did not for Ukraine...
- China is formulating bespoke strategies for Taiwan...the amphibious barges are a good example.
- yes, some Taiwanese missiles could hit China but so what.....a few bruises are expected for the inevitable victor.

Also, Chinese military production can be done at Vladivotok out of range of Taiwan's missiles. The last thing Taiwan wants is a war with Russia.
 
F16S are similar to Mig29s who are worth flying but don't show price of selling as of in today's world 🙂
Taiwan already use Mirage2000 with having experience on these birds also.
It's impossible to understand why they paying for old F16s 🕳️
Did you just compare the Viper to...the MiG-29 ... :oops: ?

What exactly is similar between the two? That they both fly ...

The F-16 may be a 70's design by General Dynamics, but it has evolved drastically over that decades thanks to its Block-updates and moving on to Lockheed Martin.

Q1. Do you have any idea that different types of (approved) armaments for the F-16 ... ?

2023%20Block70_72%20Stores%20Capabilities%20poster_AER2023020043web.jpg


Q2. Have you seen the recent upgrades to the Cockpit/Avionics ?

23-05485%20F-16%20Cockpit%20poster_AER2023080279.png


Now lets talk about the MiG-29 ...

Q3. When was the last time the Mikoyan design bureau actually did something useful since the demise of the Soviet Union?

The MiG-29 had various (variants) for different Air Forces/Navy, but pretty much stayed that same jet.

Heard that they "upgraded" it & gave it the label of MiG-35 - which first flew like 8 Years ago. How's that coming along.

Nations are still brand new Vipers and/or upgrading their previous jets to newer Blocks, which may mean to add CFT's, EW from L3 Harris, GCAS (to prevent Jets from Crashing if Pilots G-Locs.

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THe only Upgrades the MiG-29's can do...presently is get a new Paintjob.

& i'll just avoid the combat success the Viper has had since itro back in the late-70's. I almost feel sorry asking you what the MiG-29's have accomplished.
 
You shameless bot, don't trying to understand simple logic and commonsense
You are a bot and troll, forever living in your delusional world and believe what you think should be what "most countries" think, that's really a mental problem, making you become a hibitual liar.

Can you explain this since you claim "most countries" recognize Taiwan as a country? You shameless liar.

Donald Trump’s pick for Beijing envoy affirms US commitment to one-China policy​

By ROBERT DELANEY
Saturday, 05 Apr 2025

3247902.webp


President Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Beijing said on Thursday that the US leader’s strategy for China would involve “some pain” and claimed that allies must do more to counter the Asian country.

Speaking in a confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, David Perdue, a former Republican senator representing Georgia, also affirmed Washington’s commitment to a one-China policy.

“We’re going to continue to honour the one-China policy, as stated in the Taiwan Relations Act, also backed up by the three communiques and the six assurances,” Perdue said.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The Taiwan Relations Act was signed by then-president Jimmy Carter shortly after Washington switched official diplomatic relations from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, and obligates the US government to support Taiwan’s defence capabilities.

However, it does not specifically articulate a one-China policy, which is spelled out in the first of the communiques – agreements between the US and China that formalised the diplomatic switch.

Perdue’s reference to the “six assurances” relates to commitments that Washington made to Taipei in 1982 that it would disregard Beijing’s opposition to US arms sales to the island.

Most countries, including the US, do not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but Washington opposes any attempt to take the island by force and remains committed to supplying it with weapons.

Asked several times about what Trump’s administration will do to reverse the migration of supply chains for critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, shipbuilding and other industries to China, Perdue said: “President Trump is all over that. The starting conversation [is] with trade. There are going to be many others.”

Trump said last month that Chinese President Xi Jinping would visit the US in the “not too distant future”, although that has not been confirmed in Beijing.

Later in the hearing, when queried again about supply chains, Perdue lauded Trump for “stepping up and trying to communicate a very difficult strategy that may not be as easy as everybody thinks it will be on the American people”.

“There will be some pain in executing what we have to do to stand up and defend our own freedom,” he added.

Although he did not explicitly link the “pain” to disruptions expected as a result of the tariffs announced by Trump a day earlier, Perdue was speaking as global markets swooned on expectations that the punitive levies would stoke inflation and curb growth.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1,600 points on Thursday.

China was America’s second largest import source last year in terms of value, which was pegged at US$439 billion, according to US government data. That was just behind Mexico, which shipped goods worth a total of US$506 billion.

Trump hit China with a 34 per cent import tariff, on top of the 20 per cent punitive levies laid on since he returned to office in January. Along with Canada – America’s third largest import source – Mexico was spared in Trump’s worldwide tariff salvo.

Perdue was grilled by Jeanne Shaheen, the Senate committee’s senior Democrat, and other members of her party on Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of foreign aid in the form of a spending freeze for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

They asked repeatedly how to prevent China from strengthening its influence in the Global South, Eastern Europe and other regions in the absence of US support, to which Perdue stressed the need to work with “allies”, whom he expected to help in this regard.

“The parties that are not being discussed here are the other democratic countries in the world. Where’s the EU in this we’re talking about ... taxpayer money. How much is coming out of the UK, out of the EU and other democratic countries?” he said.

“We have to face the reality that this is a coalescing need that we have in the democratic, free world to stand up to these types of challenges.”

https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplu...-commitment-to-one-china-policy#goog_rewarded
 
You are a bot and troll, forever living in your delusional world and believe what you think should be what "most countries" think, that's really a mental problem, making you become a hibitual liar.

Can you explain this since you claim "most countries" recognize Taiwan as a country? You shameless liar.

Donald Trump’s pick for Beijing envoy affirms US commitment to one-China policy​

By ROBERT DELANEY
Saturday, 05 Apr 2025

3247902.webp


President Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Beijing said on Thursday that the US leader’s strategy for China would involve “some pain” and claimed that allies must do more to counter the Asian country.

Speaking in a confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, David Perdue, a former Republican senator representing Georgia, also affirmed Washington’s commitment to a one-China policy.

“We’re going to continue to honour the one-China policy, as stated in the Taiwan Relations Act, also backed up by the three communiques and the six assurances,” Perdue said.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The Taiwan Relations Act was signed by then-president Jimmy Carter shortly after Washington switched official diplomatic relations from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, and obligates the US government to support Taiwan’s defence capabilities.

However, it does not specifically articulate a one-China policy, which is spelled out in the first of the communiques – agreements between the US and China that formalised the diplomatic switch.

Perdue’s reference to the “six assurances” relates to commitments that Washington made to Taipei in 1982 that it would disregard Beijing’s opposition to US arms sales to the island.

Most countries, including the US, do not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but Washington opposes any attempt to take the island by force and remains committed to supplying it with weapons.

Asked several times about what Trump’s administration will do to reverse the migration of supply chains for critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, shipbuilding and other industries to China, Perdue said: “President Trump is all over that. The starting conversation [is] with trade. There are going to be many others.”

Trump said last month that Chinese President Xi Jinping would visit the US in the “not too distant future”, although that has not been confirmed in Beijing.

Later in the hearing, when queried again about supply chains, Perdue lauded Trump for “stepping up and trying to communicate a very difficult strategy that may not be as easy as everybody thinks it will be on the American people”.

“There will be some pain in executing what we have to do to stand up and defend our own freedom,” he added.

Although he did not explicitly link the “pain” to disruptions expected as a result of the tariffs announced by Trump a day earlier, Perdue was speaking as global markets swooned on expectations that the punitive levies would stoke inflation and curb growth.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1,600 points on Thursday.

China was America’s second largest import source last year in terms of value, which was pegged at US$439 billion, according to US government data. That was just behind Mexico, which shipped goods worth a total of US$506 billion.

Trump hit China with a 34 per cent import tariff, on top of the 20 per cent punitive levies laid on since he returned to office in January. Along with Canada – America’s third largest import source – Mexico was spared in Trump’s worldwide tariff salvo.

Perdue was grilled by Jeanne Shaheen, the Senate committee’s senior Democrat, and other members of her party on Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of foreign aid in the form of a spending freeze for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

They asked repeatedly how to prevent China from strengthening its influence in the Global South, Eastern Europe and other regions in the absence of US support, to which Perdue stressed the need to work with “allies”, whom he expected to help in this regard.

“The parties that are not being discussed here are the other democratic countries in the world. Where’s the EU in this we’re talking about ... taxpayer money. How much is coming out of the UK, out of the EU and other democratic countries?” he said.

“We have to face the reality that this is a coalescing need that we have in the democratic, free world to stand up to these types of challenges.”

https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplu...-commitment-to-one-china-policy#goog_rewarded
Ok ok, carry on your bullsh!tting
 

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