The Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council and the Information Office of the State Council of the Chinese mainland released a white paper on Wednesday (10th) on the “Taiwan Issue and China’s Reunification in the New Era”, reiterating the fact and status quo that Taiwan is part of China and that the systems on both sides of the strait are different, not an obstacle to reunification, let alone a division. As an excuse, he decided to achieve peaceful reunification under the “one country, two systems” plan. The white paper pointed out that the mainland does not promise to renounce the use of force, and reserves all necessary measures as a last resort, targeting the interference of external forces and Taiwan independence separatists.
The white paper states that the “independence” actions of the DPP authorities have caused tensions in cross-strait relations, endangered the peace and stability of the Taiwan Strait, undermined the prospect of peaceful reunification, and squeezed the space for peaceful reunification. External forces connive and incite “Taiwan independence” separatist forces to stir up troubles and provocations, intensify cross-strait confrontation and tension in the Taiwan Strait, and undermine peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region. This goes once morest the trend of the times for peace, development and win-win results, as well as the expectations of the international community and the people of the world. will. There is no way out for “relying on foreign countries to seek independence”, and “using Taiwan to control China is doomed to failure.” No one or any force can stop it.
The white paper emphasizes that the Beijing authorities take “peaceful reunification and one country, two systems” as the basic policy to resolve the Taiwan issue, which is also the best way to achieve national reunification. At present, in order to achieve peaceful reunification of the two sides of the Taiwan Strait, we must face the fundamental problem of different social systems and ideologies between the mainland and Taiwan. “One country, two systems” is the most inclusive solution to this problem.