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The chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanistan has presented Beijing with a propaganda boost, with Chinese state media capitalizing on the crisis to trumpet the supposed decline of America and taunt Taiwan with threats of invasion.
The jingoistic rhetoric coincided with air and naval drills launched Tuesday by the Chinese military, which sent fighter jets and warships near Taiwan in response to what it called the βrepeated collusion in provocationβ by Washington and Taipei.
In recent years, Chinaβs ruling Communist Party has sought to present the US as a fading global power. And now, the return of the Taliban to the streets of the Afghan capital is being touted by state media as the βdeath knell of US hegemony.β
βThe fall of Kabul marks the collapse of the international image and credibility of the US,β a commentary from state news agency Xinhua said Monday.
βFollowing the blows of the global financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic, the decay of the American hegemony has become an undisputed reality. Its failure in Afghanistan is another turning point in that spiral fall,β it added.
The Global Times, a state-run nationalist tabloid, meanwhile, has repeatedly played up what it described as the βunreliability of US commitment to its allies,β suggesting the self-governing island of Taiwan could face the same fate as Afghanistan in the event of conflict with China.
Taiwan and mainland China have been governed separately since the end of a civil war more than seven decades ago, in which the defeated Nationalists fled to Taipei. But the Chinese Communist Party views Taiwan β a democratic island of around 24 million people β as an inseparable part of its territory, despite having never controlled it.
βOnce a war breaks out in the Taiwan Straits, the islandβs defense will collapse in hours and the US military wonβt come to help.β the Global Times said in an editorial Monday.
Arthur Ding, an international relations professor at National Chengchi University in Taipei, called Beijingβs propaganda messaging on Afghanistan βcheap psychological warfare,β noting it was intended to convey the USβ alleged unreliability, especially to Taiwanβs more receptive opposition supporters who favor closer ties with Beijing.
For decades an uneasy status quo governed cross-strait relations. But under President Xi Jinping, China has increased military activity around the island, in response to what it considers to be growing calls for formal independence.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, discussions have broken out across Taiwanese social media in recent days as to how the government in Taipei would respond in the event of a Chinese invasion, and whether the US would indeed come to the islandβs defense.
So much so, that on Tuesday, Taiwanβs premier publicly stressed the island would not collapse like Afghanistan if invaded. In a press conference, Premier Su Tseng-chang appeared to confront the Chinese threats directly, saying Taiwanβs leaders are βnot afraid of being killed or imprisonedβ by βpowerful countries that want to swallow up Taiwan using force.β
Politicians in Taiwanβs ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DDP) also dismissed attempts to draw parallels between Taiwan and Afghanistan, saying such comparisons are inherently fraught.
βIf weβre going to make Afghan comparisons, Taiwan survived that moment 40+ years ago. US troops left Taiwan in 1979 after recognizing the PRC,β Wen Lii, a local ruling party official, wrote on Twitter, referring to China by abbreviation of its official name the Peopleβs Republic of China. βSo no, Taiwan is not Afghanistan,β he added.
Kolas Yotaka, spokesperson for Taiwanβs Presidential Office, said the βlazy comparisonsβ¦ignore the realities of both countries, and show little regard for the immense human suffering facing many in Afghanistan today.β
Despite formally switching diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing, the US has remained a staunch ally of Taiwan, supplying the island with defensive weaponry under the terms of the decades-old Taiwan Relations Act, including a proposed $750 million arms sale announced earlier this month.
In April, US President Joe Biden dispatched an unofficial delegation to Taiwan in a show of support for the island, according to a senior administration official and a State Department spokesperson.
The State Department also announced in April that the agency had βissued new guidelines for US government interaction with Taiwan counterparts to encourage US government engagement with Taiwan that reflects our deepening unofficial relationship.β
On Tuesday, Chinaβs Peopleβs Liberation Army (PLA) conducted βjoint fire assault and other drills using actual troopsβ off the southwest and southeast of Taiwan, according to a statement from the PLAβs Eastern Theater Command.
βRecently, the US and Taiwan have repeatedly colluded in provocation and sent serious wrong signals, severely infringing upon Chinaβs sovereignty, and severely undermining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,β the statement said. βIt is a solemn response to external interference and provocations by Taiwan independence forces.β
Though many have speculated the abrupt announcement of the PLA drills was likely timed to accompany Beijingβs propaganda messaging on Afghanistan, Carl Schuster, a former director of operations at the US Pacific Commandβs Joint Intelligence Center, said the scale of the drills suggested some degree of prior planning, rather than being tied to a specific event.
CNNβs Brad Lendon contributed reporting.
Chinese state media sets sights on Taiwan as US’ Afghan retreat stokes nationalism | CNN