China's president Xi Jinping calls Taiwan reunification "unstoppable" — military drills around the island escalate in area and deployments
Tensions continue to mount in the tech-heavy region.
In a statement posted yesterday ahead of New Year's celebrations in China, President Xi Jinping remarked on the nation's technological advancement and execution of its latest five-year plan, while calling the reunification of Taiwan "unstoppable." While the statement in itself is hardly new, there are mounting tensions in the area that may raise the level of concern among multiple interested parties.
China has executed military "drills" around Taiwan on multiple occasions over the past few decades, but the latest "Justice Mission 2025" exercises have raised more than a few eyebrows. The drills in 2022 and 2024 already encircled the island and poked into the Philippine Sea, but according to a map in a Reuters article, the past year's operations increased in both their scale and intensity.
The exercises prompted an ambassador meeting with representatives from the U.S., Australia, Japan, and India, though there are currently no details on their discussions. Some outlets remark that these exercises are seen as a response to the $11.1 billion weapons deal between the U.S. and Taiwan, announced in December 17. It can be argued that such a large-scale operation would have been decided on and planned much longer ago, though.
China's Xinhua state agency published an article about the drills, with a key sentence being that they simulate an operation to "press and contain separatist forces while denying access to external interference" – an approach summarized as "sealing internally and blocking externally."
Some analysts note that the regularity of these drills seems to imply a Chinese tone shift from reaction to regular provocation. Additionally, they consider that the consequences of a war with Taiwan would hurt the larger nation, turning it into a pyrrhic victory.
To state that a Chinese takeover of Taiwan would have major global consequences is an understatement. The vast majority of advanced chip production, particularly but not only 2 nm and smaller chips, comes from Taiwan. There are chipmaking facilities coming online from TSMC, Intel, and Samsung in other countries, but only a couple have very recently started operations (Intel and TSMC in Arizona). And most advanced packaging still happens on the island.
Even with chipmaking fully taking place outside of Taiwan, the nation's location close to China and its established trade routes and general infrastructure can't be easily replicated elsewhere, at least for the time being. The advanced EUV lithography machines are exclusively made by Dutch company in ASML, who has noted in numerous occasions that the machines in Taiwan all have remote kill-switches in case the worst happens.
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Other countries aren't sitting by and watching idly, either. In 2023, Congressman Seth Moulton stated that the U.S. could hit TSMC's facilities in case of an invasion, while Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said that such an event would signal an "existential crisis" for the nation, and allow for military operation under Japanese law. A couple years ago, the Phillipines, who regularly sees the ghost of future China in its sea, has granted the U.S. access to military bases pointing to Taiwan.
Clearly, there's a path for this situation to become a global conflict, affecting far more than the tech industry and the wider economy. And that's almost certainly one of the major reasons things haven't yet escalated further. Because a global economic crisis on top of a region-spanning military conflict isn't likely to be good for any government, at least in the short term.

Bruno Ferreira is a contributing writer for Tom's Hardware. He has decades of experience with PC hardware and assorted sundries, alongside a career as a developer. He's obsessed with detail and has a tendency to ramble on the topics he loves. When not doing that, he's usually playing games, or at live music shows and festivals.
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KE=MV2 This is akin to England saying reunification with America is unstoppable.Reply
All the more reason why we, and other countries need to distance ourselves economically from China. -
Gururu This is political click bait. I can't help it. If there was ever a chance to take Taiwan, China has three more years to do it without repurcussions.Reply -
redgarl We heard this from Russia with Ukraine, and we know what happened.Reply
Unfortunately for China, they need the fabs or they are going to push the world into an economic depression, which is going against their goal of being the first economy. They cannot force a full scale ground invasion. Also, Taiwan is an island. There is a reason why UK stood against Hitler during WW2, and it was because they are also an island. -
hotaru251 Reply
issue being thats a smaller fish thinking it can eat the larger fish.KE=MV2 said:This is akin to England saying reunification with America is unstoppable.
China dwarfs Taiwan.
w/o going into political bits that mods hate this is nothing new as China has stated this many times over past decade. -
derekullo If being close is all it takes then American should take Cuba !Reply
... err nvm we already tried that :P -
nrdwka maybe tomshardware can be space to avoide political news on the main page?Reply
There is literally thousands of webpages to read that stuff -
blppt Reply
Not really, since England isn't right off of our shoreline and running a hostile government.KE=MV2 said:This is akin to England saying reunification with America is unstoppable. -
blppt Reply
Russia's economy and military are in more dire shape than China's.redgarl said:We heard this from Russia with Ukraine, and we know what happened.
China also has like 10 times the population, if not more.