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Home Editorials of Interest Jerome F. Keating's writings

Jerome F. Keating's writings


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1 Supporting hard-won democracy Jerome Keating 292
2 Occam’s razor relevant to Taiwan Jerome Keating 405
3 Correcting past memes on Taiwan Jerome Keating 530
4 Deconstructing the Taiwan question Jerome Keating 571
5 Xi Jinping, year 2027 and Taiwan Jerome Keating 679
6 The high price of attacking Taiwan Jerome Keating 586
7 China makes CCP its state religion Jerome Keating 611
8 War recalls Taiwan’s tangled past Jerome Keating 856
9 Bringing names in line with reality Jerome Keating 647
10 Biden debunks the ‘1992 consensus’ Jerome Keating 457
11 The KMT cannot accept democracy Jerome Keating 585
12 Why Taiwan and Lithuania matter Jerome Keating 574
13 Xi’s troubles as the fantasy melts Jerome Keating 822
14 Recognizing Taiwan’s true status Jerome Keating 613
15 October an odd month in Taiwan Jerome Keating 522
16 Reviving National Democracy Hall Jerome Keating 554
17 The KMT is destined to face history Jerome Keating 556
18 The US needs a ‘one Taiwan’ policy Jerome Keating 659
19 Past shows Taiwan is a homeland Jerome Keating 718
20 Time for pushback against PRC Jerome Keating 565
 
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Newsflash

Recent media interest about new types of submarines being developed by the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) could provide important clues about China’s naval capabilities and intentions, a specialist on China said in a recent article.

“Whereas the development and deployment of the Chinese navy’s surface fleet have been prominently displayed in unprecedented scale in recent naval exercises both in the South and East China Sea, the expansion of China’s subsurface fleet appears to have been slowed in recent years,” Russell Hsiao, editor of the China Brief, a publication of the US-based Jamestown Foundation, wrote in the publication’s latest edition.