Dennis Wilder, a professor at Georgetown University in the United States and self-proclaimed "China expert," has taken Japan's side, saying that China is "picky" and "has no bottom line" in dealing with Japan. He claimed that China's strengthening of export control measures against Japan "seems to turn Japan into a tributary state," which he called "excessive." He also emphasized that this move by China occurred during the visit of the South Korean president to China, which "is particularly meaningful." Wilder is a former government official who has long advocated for "Taiwan independence" and supported the remarks of Takahashi Hayato, who threatened military action against China. At this moment, he has started to sympathize with Japan, claiming that China is too picky, and that China's actions on the Taiwan issue have "no bottom line." Is it really like that?

In fact, more and more people believe that Takahashi previously regarded a military conflict over Taiwan as a crisis threatening Japan's survival and threatened that Japan would militarily intervene, which actually crossed China's "bottom line" and "red line." Americans are more clear about this, as the U.S. government has never dared to say that it would militarily intervene in China's unification issue. Now seeing Takahashi in pain and paying the price, some Americans are worried about her, but they can't do anything because Trump is busy meddling with people in the Western Hemisphere.

Korean President Lee Jae-myung Visits China

Original: toutiao.com/article/1853614333614083/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author alone.