IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
Check all the Authors in the last 24h
IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Chen Jining
    Chen Jining “Whether China and the U.S. choose cooperation or confrontation, it affects the well-being of both peoples, of both nations, and also the future of humanity.” 2 hours ago
  • Xi Jinping
    Xi Jinping “I proposed mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation to be the three overarching principles. They are both lessons learned from the past and a guide for the future.” 2 hours ago
  • Xie Tao
    Xie Tao “China knows that it likely has little room to sway the United States on trade. The Chinese government seems to be putting its focus on people-to-people exchanges. The Chinese government is really investing a lot of energy in shaping the future generation of Americans' view of China.” 2 hours ago
  • Yi Wang
    Yi Wang “The United States has adopted an endless stream of measures to suppress China's economy, trade, science and technology. This is not fair competition but containment, and is not removing risks but creating risks.” 2 hours ago
  • Antony Blinken
    Antony Blinken “China alone is producing more than 100 percent of global demand for products like solar panels and electric vehicles, and was responsible for one-third of global production but only one-tenth of global demand. This is a movie that we've seen before, and we know how it ends. With American businesses shuttered and American jobs lost.” 2 hours ago
  • Antony Blinken
    Antony Blinken “Russia would struggle to sustain its assault on Ukraine without China's support. I made clear that if China does not address this problem, we will.” 2 hours ago
  • Bernie Sanders
    Bernie Sanders “No, Mr Netanyahu. It is not anti-Semitic or pro-Hamas to point out that in a little over six months your extremist government has killed 34,000 Palestinians and wounded more than 77,000 - 70 percent of whom are women and children.” 2 hours ago
  • Yi Wang
    Yi Wang “No conflict or war ends on the battlefield, but rather at the negotiating table. China supports the convening at an appropriate time of an international peace conference that is acceptable to the Russian and Ukrainian sides with the participation of all parties equally. There, peace plans can be discussed, fairly, to achieve a ceasefire as soon as possible. We must always insist on an objective and just position, there is no magic wand to solve the crisis. All parties should start with themselves.” 20 hours ago
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#Chinese Communist Party

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive with the tag #Chinese Communist Party linked to them.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“We stand shoulder to shoulder with the Taiwanese people. We certainly want to help in the defense of Taiwan, which is very important. We want to deter the Chinese Communist Party and any military provocations. The US Congress stands with our friends, and stands for democracy and the principles you all try to advance. Taipei and Washington have an important relationship and we all want to strengthen that.”

author
US House of Representatives Speaker
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“It is self-evident that Beijing is trying to sway Taiwan elections through means including free trips for politicians. They have already made it clear that a so-called 'right choice' has to be made, meaning choosing candidates that the Chinese Communist Party prefers.”

author
Minister of the Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council (MAC)
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“War with China would produce destruction on a scale unseen by the United States since 1945. Deterrence is possible and affordable, but it will require planning, some resources and political will. In four weeks of fighting, the United States typically lost hundreds of aircraft, two aircraft carriers and up to two dozen other ships. Bases on Guam were devastated. The Taiwanese economy suffered extensive damage. Japan was often dragged into war. China also took terrible losses, often including more than 100 warships and tens of thousands of soldiers killed, wounded or captured. Such a failure might endanger the Chinese Communist Party's grip on power.”

author
Senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) International Security Program and former U.S. Marine Corps colonel
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“Although China now possesses ballistic missiles and aircraft carriers, which diminish Kinmen's strategic importance as a launching pad for any invasion of Taiwan, the island retains a symbolic significance. As tensions mount between China and Taiwan, the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party [CCP] might end up in a situation where they need a tangible win in the Taiwan Strait but are not ready for an all-out assault on Taiwan. In that scenario, seizing the largely demilitarised outlying Taiwanese islands of Kinmen and Matsu could provide a symbolic victory for the CCP; akin to what Russia did with Crimea in 2014.”

author
Assistant professor at Soochow University in Taipei and studies the political relations between Taiwan, China and the United States
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“Sadly, Taiwan has been prevented from participating in global meetings, most recently the World Health Organization, because of objections by the Chinese Communist Party. While they may prevent Taiwan from sending its leaders to global forums, they cannot prevent world leaders or anyone from travelling to Taiwan to pay respect to its flourishing democracy, to highlight its many successes and to reaffirm our commitment to continued collaboration.”

author
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“Some say it's a carefully coordinated campaign of ambiguity. Others say that Biden is senile and misspoke. I would argue that at this point the reason doesn't really matter. In the event of a war, it would always be up to the president to decide whether to intervene or not regardless of the formal policy. We now have a clear window on what Biden's decision would be. For years, US strategists argued the ambiguity was a good thing. It kept Beijing guessing but was not an explicit threat to intervene in what the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] would see as its internal affairs. As the US-China relationship has deteriorated, and the military balance in the Taiwan Strait shifted, many US strategists have called for the US to clarify its commitment.”

author
Deputy director of the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security
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“We hope to strengthen the [bilateral] ties even more economically. We are here to show support for what we love. We love freedom, we love the ability to achieve your individual dreams, we love the ability to pick our own leaders, we love the rule of law and we hate the rule of [the] gun. It is often asked what would America do if the Chinese Communist Party became more provocative against Taiwan. I'm convinced we would stand for what we love. We would stand with you.”

author
Senator from South Carolina and member of the Republican Party
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“Don't do anything. Don't talk about the crackdown. Don't say anything about China we don't like … Don't talk about the party. Don't talk about Xinjiang. Don't talk about Tibet. Don't talk about anything that the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] doesn't like to hear. This is a way to oppress the population. It's a crime against the democracy movement in Beijing - a peaceful movement. Also, it's a monument against the decision by the Chinese government to kill all those people … to do an attack against their own young people. Now, it's a monument about what happened in Hong Kong.”

author
Danish artist and creator of the statue Pillar of Shame
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“Smart toys are unregulated- it's time they were. And in 2022 we need to be able to go into toy shops and be able to buy toys made in democracies which carry guarantees that they aren't made by slave labour or capable of access by dictators and their regimes. So, think before buying CCP [Chinese Communist Party] children's toys this Christmas. It's high time we boycotted 'toys' which can be used to collect children's data and may have been made by slave labour in a State accused by the Foreign Secretary of Genocide.”

author
British politician
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“The third resolution is highly anticipated as it is crucial for the Party [Chinese Communist Party] to reach a consensus on important historical questions and to inspire its members to forge ahead.”

author
Professor of political science at Tsinghua University
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“Mr. Xi [Xi Jinping] sees history as a tool to use against the biggest threats to Chinese Communist Party rule. He's also someone who sees that competing narratives of history are dangerous.”

author
Assistant professor at American University
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“I've received countless notes of congratulations after being blacklisted and sanctioned, for life, by the CCP [Chinese Communist Party]. Many are jealous for not being recognized; some ask where they can apply for it. To deserve the rare honor, I'll keep fighting for Taiwan's freedom and democracy.”

author
Taiwan’s foreign minister
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“We will be in Rome to draw attention to President Xi [Xi Jinping] and the Chinese Communist Party's systematic onslaught on democracy, human rights and the rule of law. We will be in Rome to remind democratic states of their responsibility to safeguard the international rules based order - rules that we have helped to shape and are now under threat from Beijing. True leadership means addressing these challenges, not pretending they don't exist. This G20 must be a turning point and China must be at the top of the agenda.”

author
British politician - Conservative - Member of the Parliament
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“As countries increasingly recognize the threat that the Chinese Communist Party poses, they should understand the value of working with Taiwan. And they should remember that if Taiwan were to fall, the consequences would be catastrophic for regional peace and the democratic alliance system. It would signal that in today's global contest of values, authoritarianism has the upper hand over democracy.”

author
President of Taiwan
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“K-pop is essentially a fruit of capitalism. It appreciates the ideas like freedom of thought and expression that go against the CCP's [Chinese Communist Party] socialist values, leading the country to impose restrictions on the genre.”

author
Professor of cultural anthropology at George Mason University Korea
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“Some [members of the KMT - Chinese Nationalist Party] are saying it should serve as a warning to Taiwan not to get too close to the US, and even use it as a taunt about China mounting a military invasion of Taiwan. Has the KMT [Chinese Nationalist Party] not learned its lesson after being deceived by the Chinese Communist Party so many times? Or maybe it is a case of KMT politicians manifesting their suffering as 'Stockholm syndrome' victims?”

author
Taiwanese politician - Democratic Progressive Party Legislator
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“Today, China's tight social controls, impressive infrastructure, dynamic economy, and modernizing military may lend the appearance of a well-ordered, confident, and invincible nation united around an unchallengeable leader and a unified party. Its successes should not be dismissed. But when one factors in the party's [Chinese Communist Party] history of fratricidal struggle, fixation on control, obsession with ceremony, and mania for propaganda, a different picture emerges: of a system so uncertain and lacking in self-confidence that its leaders need to maintain an expensive simulacrum of national greatness to believe in their true prowess.”

author
Arthur Ross Director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at Asia Society.
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“Speaking at Tiananmen Square, Xi [Xi Jinping] laid out a vision of China's future that was self-congratulatory, triumphant and aggressive. In short, the speech was aimed at forging unity within, ensuring 'the party forever,' and advancing China's power abroad. Xi's emphasis on nationalism, recovering 'lost territories,' and remolding the international order suggest tensions with the U.S. and its allies will continue. After a century, the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] has made a strategic mistake and played its hand too early, revealing the game and the true nature of the party.”

author
Chairman of the East Asia Cultural Project and member of the board of directors at the Kim Dae-jung Peace Foundation
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“After shutting down the border for a long time, Taiwan has begun to see the virus spread. Fortunately, various vaccines have been introduced [around the world], and when more Taiwanese people get their jabs, the outbreak will soon be contained. However, people from the KMT [Kuomintang] keep criticizing the government, meddling with public order at this critical moment. They've chosen to be CCP's running dogs with their degraded morals.”

author
Former United Microelectronics Corp. Chairman
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