Taiwan is the 'cork in the Pacific', hindering Chinese maritime
aggression toward US, Japan, former Trump national security adviser says on
'The Story'
FILE - Chinese President Xi Jinping stands in front of national flags of China and Republic of Congo during a meeting (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, Pool, File) (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, Pool, File)
"The answer to our primary
national security interest in Europe is making sure that NATO is defended, and
so we don't want to have Russia overrunning non-NATO friends and putting more
pressure on our NATO allies. That's number one," O'Brien said.
"Number two, the Chinese are
watching this very carefully. Xi Jinping is watching every move Vladimir Putin
takes and is considering that as he decides whether to invade Taiwan after the
Olympics or not."
He noted that the United States
has substantial national security and diplomatic interests in Taiwan. If Taiwan
was to come under CCP control, the Chinese People's Liberation Army could be at
America's western portico in a short amount of time.
"[Taiwan] is the cork in the
Pacific," O'Brien said. "If Taiwan falls, the PLA Navy flows out into
the Pacific, threatens Hawaii, threatens California [or] the Aleutian Islands
in Alaska.
In Anchorage, Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson is a sprawling, strategic installation with an eye on U.S.
interests in the Asia-Pacific region, while 300 miles northward at Fort Greely
in Fairbanks, as many as 40 anti-ballistic
missiles are present
in the dire case of an attack on the West Coast.
O'Brien told Fox News that a
Chinese invasion of Taiwan could also cut off U.S.-allied Japan, as well as
other treaty allies New Zealand, Australia and the Philippines.
"So we need to make sure
that the idea that nation-states can invade their neighbors and take them over
by conquest is not the new norm in international relations because it's going
to have consequences far beyond Ukraine," he concluded.
O'Brien said Biden gave Putin the
Berlin-connected Nord Stream 2 energy pipeline "for nothing" and
watched as in return, the ex-KGB agent "put a gun to the head of the
West" via his current threats to Ukraine.
"So he's developed an
appetite for U.S. concessions and the time for appeasement to the Russians is
over," he said. "They're looking at our words carefully, but they're
also going to look at actions."
Charles Creitz is a reporter for
Fox News Digital.
https://www.foxnews.com/media/china-xi-jinping-taiwan-russia-ukraine-putin-biden
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