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China Sends Stark Warning to US Ally

China Sends Stark Warning to US Ally

Newsweek26-06-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
China's military has condemned the Philippines over reports that a second U.S. intermediate-range missile system may soon be deployed to the Southeast Asian country.
"Inviting wolves into the house will ultimately harm oneself and destroy one's own home," Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson Senior Colonel Zhang Xiaogang warned Thursday, in a clear rebuke of United States involvement.
Newsweek reached out to the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the U.S. Department of Defense for comment.
Why It Matters
The U.S. Army first deployed the Mid-Range Capability, or "Typhon," missile system to Luzon, the Philippines' main island, in the spring of 2024, ahead of joint drills with Philippine forces. The platform is capable of firing both Standard Missile-6 interceptors and Tomahawk missiles, which can reach parts of southern China.
Philippine officials maintain that the missile launcher is purely for defensive purposes and not directed at any particular country.
China has repeatedly called the presence of both systems destabilizing and demanded their removal. The issue has further strained ties with the U.S. defense treaty ally, already tense due to the long-running South China Sea dispute.
What To Know
During the Chinese Defense Ministry's regular press conference on Thursday, Zhang was asked about reports that another Typhon missile system could be stationed in the Philippines.
Zhang said the Asia-Pacific region "is not a gladiatorial arena for major powers" and warned Manila not to "repeat the mistakes of the past."
A U.S. Army Mid-Range Capability System fires a Standard Missile-6 at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, on November 8, 2024.
A U.S. Army Mid-Range Capability System fires a Standard Missile-6 at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, on November 8, 2024.
U.S. Army
"The Philippines has intensified its efforts to introduce strategic and tactical weapons, tied itself to the U.S. chariot, and undermined regional security and stability by acting for the tiger, which seriously runs counter to the common interests of the people of the countries in the region," the official said.
Newsweek was unable to verify whether a second Typhon unit is currently scheduled for deployment in the Philippines. But a U.S. Indo-Pacific Command official, speaking on background last month, told reporters the deployment would move forward "if they [the Philippines] say yes."
Philippine Army chief Lieutenant General Roy Galido previously expressed interest in acquiring more Typhon units, citing their feasibility and role in archipelagic defense.
The Mid-Range Capability will be featured during the U.S.-Australian-led Exercise Talisman Sabre military drills in late July and early August. It will be the first Typhon system to be test-fired in the Indo-Pacific region.
Earlier this year, the Philippines received additional U.S. firepower in the form of NMESIS ship-killing missiles deployed to Batanes, the northernmost province facing the China-claimed island of Taiwan.
What People Are Saying
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. responded to criticism of the Typhon deployment in January: "I don't understand the comments on the Typhon missile system. We don't make any comments on their missile systems, and their missile systems are a thousand times more powerful than what we have."
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters during his first official visit to Manila in late March: "We have already set a robust agenda for the next few years. Our staff, both of us, are going to remain actively engaged. It reflects the strength of our ironclad alliance, particularly in the face of communist China's aggression in the region."
What Happens Next
The Philippines is expected to continue strengthening ties with the U.S. and other friendly regional powers, with an eye toward China's assertive actions in support of its territorial claims within the Philippines' maritime zone.
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Chinese Asylum Seeker Urges US to Pass Falun Gong Protection Act
Chinese Asylum Seeker Urges US to Pass Falun Gong Protection Act

Epoch Times

timean hour ago

  • Epoch Times

Chinese Asylum Seeker Urges US to Pass Falun Gong Protection Act

Falun Gong practitioner Qin Yongjie expressed his heartfelt gratitude to the United States for 'the freedom to practice his beliefs on its soil' while attending a recent parade in the U.S. capital. On July 17, Falun Gong practitioners and supporters from the Eastern United States gathered in Washington to commemorate the 26th anniversary of the ongoing persecution of Falun Gong by the Chinese regime, calling for the disbandment of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and an end to the persecution. 'In China, the persecution our family endured is one example of the CCP's persecution of Falun Gong,' Qin said. 'For 26 years, the unimaginable suffering endured by Falun Gong practitioners in mainland China has been beyond the comprehension of the international community.' Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a spiritual meditation practice based on the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance. The CCP, fearing that Falun Gong's popularity threatened the regime's power, began a brutal campaign to eradicate the practice on July 20, 1999. Since then, untold numbers of practitioners have been subjected to arbitrary detention, forced labor, torture, and even death by forced organ harvesting. 'The persecution is still ongoing, and the CCP's heinous crime of large-scale organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners has not stopped,' Qin told NTD, the sister media outlet of The Epoch Times. 'I hope the Falun Gong Protection Act will be passed in Congress as soon as possible for the president to sign into law, helping to end the persecution soon.' He said that 'in Communist China, there is no freedom of belief.' 'The CCP forces all Chinese people to study Marxist-Leninist doctrines of struggle from a young age, which is a very terrifying reality,' he said. On May 5, the House of Representatives passed the Falun Gong Protection Act (HR 1540) by voice vote with no objections. The bill includes provisions to sanction individuals implicated in the forced harvesting of organs from Falun Gong practitioners. The sanctions would apply to foreign nationals 'who the President determines have knowingly engaged in or facilitated the involuntary harvesting of organs within the People's Republic of China,' according to the bill. Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.), lead sponsor of the Falun Gong Protection Act, said that 'there has to be some consequence to this barbaric and horrific behavior.' Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) introduced the companion bill (S.817) in the Senate in March. 'China's persecution of Falun Gong practitioners is an attack on religious freedom and human rights,' he said in a statement. 'I urge my colleagues to join me in countering these human rights violations and ensuring the CCP is held accountable.' Newfound Freedom This was Qin's second time attending the commemoration event in the United States. He felt a 'sacredness and excitement' during the parade, noting it is 'impossible to practice in mainland China right now.' Qin and his wife, Chen Ruiyun, both schoolteachers in China, fled the communist country in February last year. 'We trekked through mountains and rivers, crossing from Central to South America, and arrived in the United States after countless hardships, finally reuniting with our daughter,' he said. They had planned this journey after a particularly harrowing experience in May 2014, when the couple and their daughter were detained in a detention center in their hometown of Weifang city, Shandong Province, for a month. 'From that moment, we began seeking ways to flee overseas,' Qin said. 'My daughter came to the United States to study in January 2018, and my wife and I finally achieved our dream of joining her last year.' Qin's story with Falun Gong dates back to 1997, when he began practicing it with his wife, who had taken up the practice a year earlier, during its meteoric rise in popularity since its introduction in 1992. 'The principles of Falun Gong—truthfulness, compassion, and forbearance—gave us boundless hope and strength for the future. From then on, Falun Dafa became our lifelong faith,' he said. 'Cuffed to Iron Door for 79 Days' Since the start of the persecution, many practitioners, including Qin and his wife, were forcibly taken away by the authorities and sent to China's extrajudicial system of forced labor camps and prisons. 'Being detained in detention centers, jails, and brainwashing centers became a frequent occurrence for our family,' Qin said. 'My wife and I were abducted and detained over 10 times by the CCP; our daughter was abducted and detained twice. 'I was taken to a forced labor camp twice for a total of four years, while my wife was sent to a labor camp for three years.' Qin spent two months in the Weifang Forced Labor Camp before being transferred to the Wangcun Forced Labor Camp, where the majority of arrested male Falun Gong practitioners from Shandong Province were detained and persecuted. He said he was handcuffed day and night—even while eating, sleeping, using the bathroom, and changing clothes—for 141 days. Qin recalled the persecution he experienced at the labor camp. 'I was confined in a roughly four-square-meter cell in solitary confinement. They forced me to be cuffed to the iron door, stand, and embrace the door for 79 days,' he said. 'During the first 10 days, I was not allowed to close my eyes; if I did, I was beaten on the head with a small stick.' Qin's legs swelled severely due to prolonged standing and his struggle to maintain balance. On the 10th day, Qin protested their depriving him of sleep, which led to more abuses. Qin said more than 10 policemen, each wielding an electric baton, electrocuted him. 'This inhumane electric torture lasted an entire morning and covered my entire body,' he said. 'The scars from the electric shocks took two years to fade.' After the torture session, Qin could only lean against the iron door while standing cuffed to it. The guards then allowed him to lie down from midnight to 5 a.m., but kept him chained to the door for the rest of the day. This torture continued for 79 days. In protest of the abuses, Qin went on a hunger strike for 74 days, during which the police resorted to force-feeding, thrusting a tube through his nostril into his stomach. He said that each time the tube was inserted or removed, his nose bled, causing excruciating pain. Despite the abuses, Qin remained unwavering in his faith. He said that the main principles of Falun Gong—to be true, compassionate, and forbearing—constitute 'the core of what people often refer to as universal values.' 'All societal corruption, chaos, and natural or man-made disasters stem from people's words and actions deviating from these principles,' he said. 'That's why, despite brutal persecution, we steadfastly uphold our faith.' The Brainwashing Center The abuses occurred not only in forced labor camps but also in so-called brainwashing centers. On one occasion, in a brainwashing center in Weifang city, Qin and his wife, Chen, were held in separate small rooms with all doors and windows fitted with iron bars and tightly sealed. The police used another torture method on them: handcuffs and foot shackles welded to iron chairs. Qin and Chen were forced into these iron chairs and were handcuffed and shackled at the ankles. The police worked in three shifts to interrogate them separately around the clock, attempting to coerce them into renouncing their faith. Whenever they closed their eyes, the police either splashed cold water on their faces or blasted loud noises through speakers placed near their ears. This round-the-clock sleep deprivation lasted nearly 40 days until the police extorted fines of 20,000 yuan ($2,796) and 10,000 yuan ($1,398) from the schools where Qin and Chen worked before releasing them. The money was deducted from their salaries. For more than 20 years, the CCP's surveillance of them never ceased. 'We lived in fear, constantly worried about being arrested, beaten, imprisoned, or even killed,' Qin said. Even after they fled China, the police repeatedly harassed Qin's sisters about his and Chen's whereabouts and staked out at Qin's former neighborhood for an extended period, attempting to capture the couple. Ongoing Persecution in Weifang City Reports on Minghui, a website dedicated to documenting the persecution of Falun Gong by the regime, revealed that at least 139 Falun Gong practitioners in Qin's hometown of Weifang city had been persecuted to death by the CCP. Many more cases go unreported due to families' fear of repercussions at the hands of the regime. Among the Falun Gong practitioners persecuted to death for their faith, Qin said he personally knew 18 of them. Some of them were killed during detention, while others died shortly after being released from prisons, labor camps, or brainwashing centers. Qin said he still vividly remembers one of them, Jiang Guobo, a former official of the Weifang Municipal Political and Legal Affairs Committee, who was persecuted alongside him in the same labor camp. Because Jiang refused to renounce his faith in Falun Gong, he was arrested 13 times, sentenced to forced labor three times, and later imprisoned for five years in Shandong Men's Prison, where he was subjected to drug torture. After his release, Jiang continued to suffer from the effects of the unknown drugs that were forcibly injected into him in prison, experiencing abdominal swelling, weakness, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, and rectal bleeding, according to Minghui. He frequently fainted and ultimately passed away on April 29, 2021. Qin, who frequently visits Minghui to keep abreast of the ongoing persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in his hometown, said, 'The persecution in Weifang City remains severe.' From Minghui, he learned that his friend Wu Jiqiang, a Falun Gong practitioner in Weifang, was sentenced to four and a half years in prison by the Kuiwen District Court on April 18. Many of his other friends remain detained by the CCP in detention centers and prisons. 'I thank the U.S. government and the American people for their support of Falun Dafa, which helps bring justice to persecuted Falun Gong practitioners in China,' Qin said.

US Blocked Taiwan President From NY Stopover After China Intervened: Report
US Blocked Taiwan President From NY Stopover After China Intervened: Report

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

US Blocked Taiwan President From NY Stopover After China Intervened: Report

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The United States blocked Taiwan's president from making a stopover in New York en route to Central America, The Financial Times reported, citing three people familiar with the matter. Newsweek reached out to the White House for comment via email on Monday. Why It Matters The reported decision by the Trump administration comes as the U.S. is amid sensitive trade talks with China. Beijing objects to any official U.S. engagement with Taiwanese leadership. The complex dynamics are amplified by the backdrop of U.S. legislation, like the Taiwan Relations Act, which guides American commitments to Taiwan's security and underpins unofficial commercial ties. Washington's trading relationship with China, meanwhile, has seen months of turmoil during Trump's repeated tariff threats and disagreements over intellectual property, market access and more. Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te waves after an offshore anti-terrorism drill at the Kaohsiung harbor in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan, on June 8. Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te waves after an offshore anti-terrorism drill at the Kaohsiung harbor in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan, on June 8. Chiang Ying-ying/AP What To Know According to FT, Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te was planning to stop over in New York in August en route to Paraguay, Guatemala and Belize, all of whom recognize Taiwan's independence. Reuters also reported earlier that Lai had considered stopping in New York and Dallas on the way to Latin America. But the U.S. told Lai he could not visit New York, FT reported, citing three sources. Lai's office said in a statement Monday that he does not currently have overseas travel plans because he's focusing on ongoing trade discussions with the U.S. and Taiwan's recovery from a typhoon. Chinese and U.S. officials also met in Stockholm on Monday for trade talks, Reuters reported. China claims Taiwan, which is democratically governed, as its own territory and regularly rejects any shows of support for Taipei from Washington. What People Are Saying A person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters: "There's no such thing as cancelling the trip. In fact, further arrangement for the trip will be made later this year." Karen Kuo, spokesperson for Taiwan's Presidential Office, said earlier Monday that Lai's itinerary will be announced once it's finalized, adding: "However, considering the recent typhoon disaster recovery efforts in southern Taiwan, the U.S.-Taiwan reciprocal tariff measures and regional developments, the president currently has no plans for overseas visits in the near future." What Happens Next Lai has not visited the U.S. since Trump took office in January, though the Taiwanese leader stopped over in Hawaii and the U.S. territory of Guam last year while visiting the Pacific. It's not immediately clear whether Lai will visit the U.S.

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