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VisitHow will Taiwan respond to U.S. arms sales by June 30, 2025?
Requests more arms • 25%
Accepts current sales • 25%
Requests diplomatic mediation • 25%
Seeks alternative suppliers • 25%
Official statements from the Taiwanese government or Ministry of National Defense
China Opposes $385 Million U.S. Arms Sales to Taiwan, Violating One-China Principle
Dec 1, 2024, 03:35 AM
China has expressed strong opposition to the recent approval of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, valued at $385 million. A spokesperson from the Chinese Foreign Ministry stated that this decision contradicts U.S. commitments to not support Taiwan's independence and violates the one-China principle, as well as several key agreements between China and the U.S., particularly the August 17 Communiqué of 1982. The spokesperson emphasized that China has lodged serious protests against the U.S. regarding this matter and called for an immediate cessation of arms sales to Taiwan.
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Increased military readiness • 25%
Public statement of gratitude • 25%
Request for more aid • 25%
No official response • 25%
Increased military drills • 25%
Enhancement of defense infrastructure • 25%
Diplomatic engagement with US allies • 25%
Other • 25%
Military exercises • 25%
Diplomatic protests • 25%
Economic sanctions • 25%
Other • 25%
Increased military exercises • 33%
Increased defense budget • 33%
New defense agreements with other countries • 33%
Resume nuclear arms talks • 25%
Impose economic sanctions • 25%
Increase military presence near Taiwan • 25%
Other • 25%
Increase military drills • 25%
Seek further arms purchases • 25%
Strengthen diplomatic ties with the US • 25%
Other • 25%
Condemnation from China • 25%
Support from US allies • 25%
Neutral stance from most countries • 25%
Other • 25%
Strong rebuttal • 25%
Diplomatic engagement • 25%
No official response • 25%
Other • 25%
Sales proceed without change • 25%
Sales are reduced • 25%
Sales are canceled • 25%
Sales are delayed • 25%
Proceed as planned • 25%
Delayed • 25%
Reduced • 25%
Cancelled • 25%
Economic sanctions • 25%
Military exercises • 25%
Diplomatic protests • 25%
No significant response • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Shift to a neutral stance • 25%
Maintain current policy • 25%
Increase support for Taiwan • 25%
Decrease support for Taiwan • 25%