Taiwan’s former president, Ma Ying-jeou, will go to China this week, the first visit there by any Taiwanese leader since China’s civil war ended. Though the trip is unofficial, it may offer clues on how Beijing might seek to influence Taiwan. nyti.ms/40CIBA5
@nytimes They might be discussing how to perform the unification smoothly.
@nytimes Hopefully this visit may bring China-Tibet peace!
@nytimes Good sign, peaceful unification with China 🇨🇳. Taiwan is part of China.
@nytimes This is good news. Talk. Rather than war. Talk some more if needed. However, that is not how the US would want it. But still talk. Do not care about the US. It is Taiwan anyway that is going to be destroyed not the US. Taiwan should not think about USA but its Chinese citizens.
@nytimes China is a bully, the world thought America was bad, look how belligerent China acts, and they’re not even top dog yet.
@nytimes Peaceful reunification is the way. But watch how America will try stop peace from happening. Wars are USA's main of business.
@nytimes Last month, Andrew Hsia, vice-chairman of the KMT, met with the CPC and both sides rejected "Taiwan independence" rather than continuing as part of China, defended the "one China" principle. Meanwhile, US has 60% of its fleet there, which is for no other reason than to provoke.