Symmetry wrote:Did you know that the EU spent more on foreign aid in a year than China has in the last 60 years combined? It's an interesting little stat, open to a variety of interpretations, but all the more fascinating for it.
The US and EU have a lot of soft power that Beijing is rightly wary of. China stresses that its aid come with no strings attached, which should pass literally nobody's BS detector, especially given that one obvious string is that countries can't recognise Taiwanese sovereignty.
You barely passed the 50-word mark and yet you've still managed to fall flat on your face, again. Does China lack financial clout, or does China use its significant financial clout to pressure people into not recognizing Taiwan as a nation state? It's funny enough that you've implied two directly contradictory things, but even funnier that neither are correct in the first place.
Regarding your first point: you, as a Brit, should know China's financial clout better than most, Symmetry. Haven't you seen the BBC footage of British leader after British leader travelling to Beijing to glad hand Chinese ministers, then inviting them to come put their feet up in Buckingham Palace, then lobbying the EU to be nicer to China, then going back to Beijing for some more glad handing? Did you see Theresa May put a hold on the Hinkley Point deal in order to try and stamp her authority on her role as PM, only to cave the next day and re-approve it after the Chinese kicked up a fuss? Why do you think Britain is so keen to give China all these hand jobs on the sofa with everyone watching? That's right: China has lots of money to spend.
So now we're in agreement that China possesses significant financial clout, on to your point about China using that clout to pressure people into snubbing Taiwan: no one in the world recognizes Taiwan as a separate entity to the mainland. Everyone recognizes Taiwan and the mainland in combination as one whole nation state. The only dispute is whether the government in Beijing or the government in Taipei is the rightful government of all of China, and no one except a handful of tiny, unimportant entities (e.g. Nauru, the Holy See) recognize the administration in Taipei as the rightful government. 171 nations - including the US, UK, Germany, France and Russia - recognize Beijing as the legitimate government, for much the same reason as those nations recognize Washington - and not the Navajo Confederation - as the legitimate government of all of the US: it just obviously is.