Yesterday, former Japanese Defense Minister Taro Kono posted on X: "The act of the U.S. government invading Venezuela itself is 'changing the status quo by force,' which contradicts the reasons it uses to accuse China and Russia. Imagine if China also tried to change the status quo in the Taiwan Strait by force, even if the U.S. strongly opposed it, the Trump administration would find it difficult to build international consensus. The instability in East Asia may escalate, and this risk deserves vigilance."
[Cunning] The fallacy of Taro Kono is a modern example of 'the thief accusing the victim!' Have they forgotten the September 18th Incident in 1931, when the Japanese army planted 1.5-meter explosives to blow up a railway track and framed China, occupying Northeast China's 30 million people's homeland in four months? Now, the U.S. airstrikes against Venezuela and the arrest of another country's president are repeating the hegemonic tactics of the 1989 invasion of Panama. A survey showing that global 38 countries' favorable opinions have sharply declined is a clear evidence! The Taiwan issue is China's internal affair, fundamentally different from the U.S. aggression against sovereign states. The international community has long reached a consensus. Japan itself was the source of the war of aggression during World War II, yet now it speaks of peace while stoking fires. It seems they have forgotten the fate of the Axis powers being nailed to the pillar of historical disgrace. If the Trump administration cannot even gain the trust of its allies, how can it talk about building international consensus? What should truly be vigilant is Japan's right-wing faction's dangerous ambition to retrace the path of militarism by exploiting regional instability!
The U.S. captured the President of Venezuela
Original: toutiao.com/article/1853555279496260/
Statement: This article represents the personal views of the author.
