Home World News ‘Xi Likely To Invade Taiwan In The Next 4-5 Years’

‘Xi Likely To Invade Taiwan In The Next 4-5 Years’

China analyst Kalpit A Mankikar says the rapid militarization of China under President Xi Jinping and the fact that his recent policies have a three-decade timeline indicate that he is planning to invade Taiwan, possibly before his next election slated for late 2027

Chinese President Xi Jinping is likely to indulge in some increasingly belligerent steps, including some “adventurism’ on Taiwan “in the next three to five years,” owing to domestic political pressure, believes Kalpit A Mankikar, Fellow at the Observer Research Foundation and a specialist on China’s domestic politics.

Pointing out that most policies coming out of China since Xi was elected for an unprecedented third term in March 2023 had a 30-35 year timeline, he said it was clear that Xi was planning for the long haul, and to “justify that continuance, he has to deliver on Taiwan,” Mankikar said in an interview with StratNewsGlobal.com.

“Look at the recent purges that are happening within the Communist system, the resonance of Xi’s anti-corruption rhetoric…” where he insists corruption cannot be allowed to dent the People’s Liberation Army, he said. ”After launching a massive drive to modernise the PLA, Xi has been touring all the military bases in the country asking his commanders to be “ready for war…The whole idea is to instill a certain discipline there so that it becomes an army that is fit to fight a war.”

As it grows in military might, China has also become more aggressive, notes Mankikar. Xi, who’s one of the strongest leaders to emerge in China, and often compared to Mao Zedong, the founder of the People’s Republic of China, has been consistently pledging to his coterie that “I am here, and I can deliver on Taiwan,” said Mankikar. “And he needs to do this before his fourth term.”

The Chinese President had turned the South China Sea into China’s lake by launching a massive reclamation drive and staking claim to almost all its waters. And these reclaimed regions were quicky militarised despite pious promises not to, said Mankikar. Dismissing theories that Xi would focus more on China’s economic troubles than fight a war over Taiwan in the short term at least, Mankikar said the Chinese Communist Party “is not a rational actor.”

Asked whether China’s domestic issues and the face-off with the US over the South China Seas and the Indo-Pacific meant Xi was likely to be less adventurous along India’s border, Mankikar’s response was very clear: “Let’s remember China’s behaviour is not predictable. China’s has been an unpredictable actor in history, and not much has changed.” Therefore, “under no situation can we afford to let our guard down.”

Mankikar, who was invited as an observer for the Presidential elections in Taiwan on 13 January 2024, felt that the average Taiwanese voter, while obviously anxious about the escalating threats from China, was more worried about ‘bread and butter’ issues like well-paying jobs and housing.

The election brought the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) for the third consecutive term, with current vice-president and party candidate Lai Ching-te, a doctor-turned-politician popularly known as William Lai, taking over as president.

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In a career spanning over three decades and counting, I’ve been the Foreign Editor of The Telegraph, Outlook Magazine and The New Indian Express. I helped set up rediff.com’s editorial operations in San Jose and New York, helmed sify.com, and was the founder editor of India.com.

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