Category: China

Taiwan Complains to South Korea About Labeling of Taiwanese Citizens at Korea’s Airports

It is a bit weird that Taiwan is bringing up this issue now when South Korea says the labeling they have been using for Taiwan has been in place since 2004. Did the Taiwanese government just notice this now?:

Taiwan said Wednesday it has changed South Korea’s name in its immigration systems from “Korea” to “South Korea,” in a reciprocal move as Seoul continues to list it as “China (Taiwan)” on its e-arrivals despite its repeated calls for a “correction.”

Taiwan’s foreign ministry also warned that it will take further corresponding measures if it hears no positive response from Seoul by the end of this month.

The ministry said in a statement that the change took effect March 1, with the nationality of South Koreans on its foreign resident certificates now listed as “South Korea,” instead of “Korea.”

It said the measure came as a reciprocal measure, as Seoul has yet to “correct the inappropriate labeling” of the island state in its e-arrival card system.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Will China Use the Cuba Model to Enforce a Blockade Around Taiwan?

That is what this academic thinks will happen:

As Trump acts with open contempt for international law, China is taking notes. The Cuba model, in particular, offers a useful blueprint for Chinese President Xi Jinping to apply in pursuing his “historic mission” of “reunification” with Taiwan. This is a live demonstration of how a superpower can strangle a country into submission. (……)

For Cuba, which has long depended primarily on oil purchased from Venezuela and Mexico, Trump has exploited that vulnerability by imposing a complete blockade on fuel deliveries. Millions of people have lost access to electricity. Water-pumping stations have shut down. Tractors and delivery trucks sit idle, leading to food-price spikes, food shortages and rising hunger. Hospitals struggle to function amid intermittent blackouts.

The suffering is the point; it is the lever Trump is using to apply pressure to the regime, whose fall, Trump glibly maintains, is imminent.

For Xi, such a coercive siege of Taiwan might be more appealing than a full-scale amphibious invasion across the Taiwan Strait, which would be fraught with logistical challenges and likely draw in the US and Japan. Instead of firing missiles at Taipei or storming Taiwan’s beaches, China could declare a maritime quarantine or customs-inspection regime around the island, with Chinese coast-guard vessels stopping energy tankers bound for Taiwanese ports for “safety checks” or “anti-smuggling operations.” (……)

In Taiwan’s case, China could simply wait until the economic and humanitarian crisis that it created became severe enough to justify moving in to “stabilize the island” and “rescue its people.” As with Trump’s “friendly takeover,” which makes geopolitical coercion sound like corporate restructuring, the logic is that of a protection racket: create the problem, then step in to “solve” it.

All this could unfold under a shroud of legal ambiguity. While a formal naval blockade would be regarded as an act of war under international law, a quarantine or inspection regime could be presented as law enforcement, rather than military action. China’s government — which insists that Taiwan is a Chinese province, not a sovereign state — would likely portray maritime inspections as an internal matter of administrative enforcement.

Would Japan and the US risk war with a major nuclear power and the world’s second-largest military spender over actions portrayed as customs enforcement? Would they want to take responsibility for a crisis-stricken Taiwan? The answer may well be no, especially at a time when the US is hemorrhaging blood and treasure owing to Trump’s multiplying military adventures abroad.

Other countries would be even less likely to jump to Taiwan’s defense. Just as the US is using tariff threats to prevent third countries, such as Mexico, from providing oil to Cuba, China could leverage its central role in global trade and its chokehold on rare-earth supplies to deter opposition to a siege of Taiwan.

Korea Herald

You can read more at the link, but the problem Cuba has is that they have no friends willing to help them. If China tries to blockade Taiwan will they attack American ships brought in to supply the island?

Tweet of the Day: Giant EV Fire in China

Trump Announces Delay in Summit with Xi in China

In 5-6 weeks there may not even be an Islamic Republic of Iran for Trump and Xi to talk about:

U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on March 17, 2026, in this photo released by UPI. (Yonhap)

U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on March 17, 2026, in this photo released by UPI. (Yonhap)

U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he expects to travel to China for a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping “in about five or six weeks,” after delaying the planned trip because of the ongoing war with Iran.

Trump made the remarks during a meeting with Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin in the Oval Office, noting that his administration is “resetting” the high-stakes meeting between him and Xi in Beijing. He was initially expected to visit China from March 31 to April 2.

“It looks like it’ll take place in about five weeks. We are working with China. They were fine with it,” Trump said, responding to a reporter’s question about the delayed trip.

“I look forward to seeing President Xi. He looks forward to seeing me, I think … We have a good relationship with China,” he added.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Chinese Power Move?

https://twitter.com/antmillionsbot/status/2028162027999428858

Tweet of the Day: China’s Maritime Militia Trains for Taiwan Contingency

Should Chinese Automakers Be Allowed to Sell Their Cars in the U.S.?

The way I look at it, is that I have no issues with a Chinese automaker selling their cars in the U.S. if they use American labor, follow American labor and environmental laws, and are not subsidized by the Chinese government:

Aerial view of new vehicles waiting for shipment to overseas markets in a port in Lianyungang in eastern China. - FeatureChina/AP

Aerial view of new vehicles waiting for shipment to overseas markets in a port in Lianyungang in eastern China. – FeatureChina/AP

Chinese cars could be at an American dealership sooner than you think, and that’s good news for US consumers.

Chinese car companies make more vehicles than anyone else on Earth and export more as well. But high tariffs and hostile US-China trade relations have kept them out of the American market.

That’s likely to change, according to experts, with Chinese autos hitting US showrooms in the next five to 10 years.

“The ambition is there,” said Lei Xing, an independent auto analyst and former chief editor of China Automotive Review magazine, even if companies have to build factories here rather than ship cars here from China.

He said multiple Chinese automakers have shown “readiness to come to the US, to build in the US.”

That would be helpful for American car buyers. Greater competition means more choices, especially for EVs, which in turn should lower prices. But it would also squeeze the profits and market share of the car companies already selling in the US, likely affecting the nearly 1 million people who work for them.

Chinese cars shipped to America come with a 100% tariff, by far the highest tariff rate for any import. But President Donald Trump, a critic of most Chinese products, recently seemed welcoming of Chinese brands if they build plants in the US.

CNN

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Deprogramming Chinese Tourists on Jeju

Tweet of the Day: China Flooding South Korea with Illegal Drugs?

https://twitter.com/ViiV_333/status/2018608759065792539

Tweet of the Day: The Real China Economic Miracle?