China is way too appeasing in their foreign policy. I think it does partly explain China's good cooperation with other countries, which is good, but sometimes I wish they had more of a backbone. I just learned an hour ago that China doesn't even recognize Crimea as part of Russia.
My issue is when they put down "redlines" for Taiwan, have the west/US brazenly violate those redlines, and then follow up with the US with a letter or phonecall.
At some point, it might even be beneficial if you stop declaring redlines. If countries can regularly break them, then it does more to make China look weak.
It's like the one criticism I have with China (in general!) right now.
I still struggle to see this as a weakness honestly... why should we be condeming China for not taking the American approach and resorting to bombs first, talking later?
That's my view, too. We also don't know what's said behind closed doors. And the consequence of crossing a red line doesn't have to be a military response. China does seem to respond when it's red lines are crossed, it just does so subtly.
I believe the reason China does this is to boost its foriegn policy to BRICs/the third world. Its hard to make an arguement that you're the better option to the USA if you're engaged in 20 proxy wars.
Russia >> China
It hurts, but it's true
China is way too appeasing in their foreign policy. I think it does partly explain China's good cooperation with other countries, which is good, but sometimes I wish they had more of a backbone. I just learned an hour ago that China doesn't even recognize Crimea as part of Russia.
My issue is when they put down "redlines" for Taiwan, have the west/US brazenly violate those redlines, and then follow up with the US with a letter or phonecall.
At some point, it might even be beneficial if you stop declaring redlines. If countries can regularly break them, then it does more to make China look weak.
It's like the one criticism I have with China (in general!) right now.
I still struggle to see this as a weakness honestly... why should we be condeming China for not taking the American approach and resorting to bombs first, talking later?
That's my view, too. We also don't know what's said behind closed doors. And the consequence of crossing a red line doesn't have to be a military response. China does seem to respond when it's red lines are crossed, it just does so subtly.
I believe the reason China does this is to boost its foriegn policy to BRICs/the third world. Its hard to make an arguement that you're the better option to the USA if you're engaged in 20 proxy wars.