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China bristles at Macron linking Ukraine to Taiwan

Greg TorodeReuters
If Russia could take part of Ukraine, "what could happen in Taiwan?" Emmanuel Macron asked. (AP PHOTO)
Camera IconIf Russia could take part of Ukraine, "what could happen in Taiwan?" Emmanuel Macron asked. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

China has criticised as a "double standard" attempts to link the defence of Ukraine with the need to protect Taiwan from a Chinese invasion - a thinly veiled reference to a speech by French Emmanuel Macron in Singapore.

Macron told the Shangri-La Dialogue defence meeting if the United States and Europe were not able to bring an end to Russia's war in Ukraine, it would affect their credibility in the Indo-Pacific region as well.

"If we consider that Russia could be allowed to take a part of the territory of Ukraine without any restriction, without any constraint, without any reaction of the global order....what could happen in Taiwan?" he said on Friday.

In a Facebook post, China's embassy in Singapore said that comparing the Taiwan issue with the Ukraine issue as "unacceptable".

"The two are different in nature and not comparable at all," the post said, adding Taiwan was entirely an internal affair for China.

"If one tries to denounce a 'double standard' with a double standard, the only result we can get is still a double standard," the post said.

The embassy post did not mention Macron directly but it was accompanied by a photo of him talking at the event.

Beijing has previously dispatched defence ministers and other senior military officials to the annual meeting, which ends Sunday, but this year sent a relatively low-level delegation of military academics.

China views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory and has stepped up military and political pressure to assert those claims, including increasing the intensity of war games, saying the island is one of its provinces with no right to be called a state.

Taiwan's government rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims, saying only the island's people can decide their future.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told the gathering on Saturday that China posed an "imminent" threat and any attempt to conquer Taiwan "would result in devastating consequences for the Indo-Pacific and the world".

Regional diplomats said that Macron's comments were far from isolated during the freewheeling, informal meeting and risks of a Russian victory emboldening a Chinese invasion of Taiwan had at times surfaced in sideline discussions.

"The message from many backing Ukraine is that the line must be held if a message is to be sent to China," one East Asian envoy said.

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