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Taipei Times


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# Article Title Author Hits
961 The Formosa Incident: a look back Gerrit Van Der Wees 482
962 Taiwan the right choice for helping the US Navy Yang Chung-hsin 楊宗新 454
963 Hong Kong: The world is watching Taipei Times Editorial 467
964 Politicians sink to a new low Taipei Times Editorial 443
965 Pro-China parties must be rejected Paul Lin 林保華 471
966 KMT in a panic over ‘spy’ allegations Taipei Times Editorial 516
967 US Army should choose Taiwan Grant Newsham 443
968 Beware tiger, mice can roar Taipei Times Editorial 511
969 HK at the front of a new Cold War Wir fur Hongkong 439
970 Democrats must stand up to China Gray Sergeant 478
971 US port calls benefit Taiwan Taipei Times Editorial 434
972 Reading between the lines Taipei Times Editorial 467
973 Slavery on China’s plantations Taipei Times Editorial 418
974 All languages equally important Taipei Times 437
975 Taiwan’s economy on the upswing Taipei Times Editorial 428
976 US and Australia too late on Pacific Bill Sharp 471
977 Czechs turn PRC game against it Joseph Bosco 441
978 Beijing’s latest bid to lure voters Taipei Times Editorial 425
979 Ko casts stones from glass house Chamberlain Lee 李柏翰 463
980 Tsai controls the defense narrative David Brown 502
 
Page 49 of 144

Newsflash

On May 20, former chairman of the American Institute in Taiwan Richard Bush and the head of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in Washington, Jason Yuan (袁健生), hosted a seminar during an academic conference to mark the centennial of the October 1911 Revolution in the Republic of China (ROC) at the Brookings Institution in the US capital.

Bush took the opportunity to remind those people in attendance that the US had broached the prickly issue of Taiwan and the Republic of China back in the 1950s and 1960s with the concepts of “New Country” (the founding of a new country) and “two Chinas.”

He then said that the concept of “two Chinas” that was proposed by the US government decades ago could still be applied to cross-strait relations today, but this would only be possible if Beijing would accept it.