William Yang Profile picture
Aug 9 28 tweets 6 min read
Despite the #PLA's large-scale air and sea exercises around #Taiwan, life across the island remains largely unaffected. I talked to @che_huai, @albertowu, @kuokuomich and others about how they perceive the rising military threats from #China. My latest: dw.com/en/how-are-tai…
"I think many Taiwanese people, including myself, are vigilantly following China's military exercises around Taiwan, but we have a measurement in our mind regarding how much threat this is towards Taiwan," @che_huai said.
"We will view most of the military moves as acts of intimidation until the PLA's actions reach the brink. But when certain indicators emerge, it will trigger more reactions from Taiwan's civil society," he added, referring to China's People's Liberation Army.
The relative calmness across the territory is a huge contrast to how the international community views the unfolding event.
"My friends in Germany were very worried about my situation because, from the news they read, it looked like China had completely encircled Taiwan," said Winifred Yu, a professor teaching German language and literature ...
... at the National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology. "When they asked about the situation here, I told them that the situation was fine and that it's just the same as before."
While some say the calmness comes from decades of experience living under the looming threat from China, others say the event this time still feels slightly different from the last Taiwan Strait Crisis in 1996, when Beijing conducted a series of missile launches around Taiwan.
"I remember the news of President Lee Teng-hui visiting Cornell, all the threats, the military exercises on the news. I also remember the fear — a significant number of my friends from childhood emigrating abroad," said @albertowu.
"The current situation does feel a bit different, probably because I'm older and am more inured to Chinese saber-rattling.
We were glued to Twitter during the Pelosi visit and subsequent exercises, and it's hard not to see the pictures of the blockade and envision the fact of a Chinese invasion," he underlined.
"But once I'm off Twitter and stop watching the news, I feel a lot better — seeing people do their morning exercises, going to the grocery store, attending academic talks, going about their daily lives."
On Tuesday, Taiwan's Foreign Minister Joseph Wu slammed Beijing for staging a serious provocation with its military exercises around the island.
He also reiterated that Taiwan and its people have "displayed resilience and confidence" while remaining calm in the face of the PLA's aggression.
"China's continued attempts to intimidate Taiwan will not panic us, nor will they defeat us. Taiwan will continue to staunchly uphold its free and democratic way of life," the minister added.
Albert Wu said he was impressed by the Taiwanese government's handling of the situation, especially the government's strategies to communicate with the public.
"I think what the Ukraine war has made clear is that contemporary warfare is as much about information and rallying public sentiment as it is about actual military capacity," he said, pointing to President Tsai's activitiy on the regional social media platform LINE.
"Her account and her messaging have been calm and reassuring. The Ministry of National Defense Twitter account has been consistent at putting out factual information. I think this type of transparency bodes well for the future," he added.
While many Taiwanese stress they are not overly concerned about the rising military threat from Beijing, some say the ongoing drills have changed their views on the possibility of a Chinese invasion of the island.
"I used to not believe that China would launch a military invasion against Taiwan, but now I wonder where the future for Taiwan's next generation is," said Andrea Yang, a marketing professional in her 40s.
Yang and other Taiwanese DW spoke to for this article say that one important indicator of whether China will militarily invade Taiwan or not is whether other countries are starting to evacuate their citizens.
They explain that if countries friendly to Taiwan were to start evacuating their citizens, it would have more of an impact on the Taiwanese people's morale.
Yang said she hasn't started thinking about the possibility of leaving Taiwan yet, but if she gets a chance in the future, she stressed she will consider emigrating to other places.
However, not all Taiwan residents are thinking of a contingency plan. @kuokuomich, a Taiwanese American academic and writer who moved to Taipei with her family last year, said her family hasn't considered a contingency, yet.
"I think I'm afraid to do so — because it means having to deal with the privilege to leave. I don't want to be a person who leaves. I want to be a person who stays, who helps, who is there for others," she said, ...
... adding that their elderly family members and her two-year-old daughter in Taiwan make it hard to imagine leaving Taiwan.
"Having the choice to leave is obviously a profound privilege, and the American passport equips one to leave. I'm constantly aware of this power disparity and for that reason, I try my best to defer to the local attitudes. If they're not panicked, I'm not either," she said.
With China extending the military exercises, most Taiwanese believe it's important for them to focus on maintaining their daily routine.
"What else is there to do but carry on? There's not much we can do other than to stay informed, start preparing for the worst, but to stay calm in the meantime," Albert Wu said.

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More from @WilliamYang120

Aug 10
"The U.S. solar industry is confronting fresh disruptions as U.S. officials crack down on human-rights abuses in #China’s #Xinjiang region, which produces almost half the world’s supply of a crucial component in solar panels."wsj.com/articles/u-s-s…
"The extent of the disruption is still hard to gauge: The #Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, went into effect at the end of June, and importers, suppliers and customs agents are still feeling their way on what it will take to get goods into the country."
"The industry has struggled in the past few years with a series of disruptions, from rising materials costs to the threat of new tariffs on major panel manufacturers.
Read 10 tweets
Aug 10
"This complex daylong war game demonstrated how destructive any attempted Chinese invasion of #Taiwan could be across the Indo-Pacific—and what a forbidding challenge the island would be for #Beijing’s military forces."wsj.com/articles/war-g…
“No one thought this was realistic until the last few years,” said retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Paula Thornhill, one of the participants. In the past, she said, war gamers were sometimes accused of being “warmongers,” ...
... but since then, China has increased both its military capabilities and aspirations.
Read 11 tweets
Aug 9
By @LiYuan6: "While much of that pride is well placed, it also breeds cockiness. It gives Mr. Xi a justification for unwinding the policies of openness that helped #China emerge from international isolation and abject poverty under Mao." nytimes.com/2022/08/09/bus…
"It has also given a boost to extreme nationalists who trumpet Chinese superiority, and who are now urging military confrontation with Taiwan after Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit."
"Their strident rhetoric shows how little they think of American power and how easily they think China would win a great-power competition with the United States."
Read 12 tweets
Aug 9
By @michael_ASPI: "But in the real world, Chinese military aggression shows us that Beijing is intent on changing the peaceful status quo across the #Taiwan Strait—something that is a flat contradiction to #China’s stated policy of wanting peace."aspistrategist.org.au/taiwan-shows-a…
It’s surprising that no one in Beijing or in the PLA higher command seemed to consider the effect on Japanese policy and public opinion that’s flowing from the disastrous decision to launch ballistic missiles into Japan’s EEZ.
If China had wanted to really energise Tokyo’s efforts to strengthen Japan’s military power and to think through the close connection between Taiwan’s security and its own, these missile launches would have been the best way of achieving that.
Read 16 tweets
Aug 9
"A #Uyghur scholar who studied in Turkey and worked for an international company in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou was arrested by authorities from his hometown Urumqi, a local police officer and Uyghurs with knowledge of the situation said."rfa.org/english/news/u…
Subi Tursun, now 29, went to Turkey in 2010 to attend college and stayed there for work after completing his studies, a Uyghur from Urumqi who now lives in exile in Turkey and is friends with the man’s father told RFA.
In autumn 2021, Tursun, who had not become a Turkish citizen, was transferred to the company’s branch in Guangzhou, said the source, who declined to be identified for safety reasons.
Read 12 tweets
Aug 9
A poll conducted by Japan's NHK shows more than 80 percent of respondents think #China's increased military activities following US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to #Taiwan will affect the Japanese security environment.www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/ne…
NHK conducted the telephone survey on 2,577 randomly chosen citizens aged 18 or older from Friday through Sunday. Of them, 1,223 people responded.
Forty percent of the respondents said they think the developments will significantly affect Japan's security environment, while 42 percent said they will have some effects.
Read 4 tweets

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