Difficult Word/ Phrase | Contextual Sense |
Drill | Undergo military training or do military exercises |
Sober | Serious and calm |
Draw a line | to put a limit on what you will do or allow to happen, esp. because you feel something is wrong |
Hollow out | to remove the inside of (something) |
Inclination | An attitude of mind |
Isolation | A country’s withdrawal from international politics |
Offset | Make up for |
Herald | to be a sign that something is going to happen soon |
Strained | Not friendly |
Teeter | Move unsteadily |
One the edge of an abyss | If someone is on the edge or brink of an abyss, they are about to enter into a very frightening or threatening situation |
Cut off | Cease |
Hostage | prisoner |
That the four-day military exercises conducted by China, in the waters and airspace surrounding Taiwan, concluded on August 7 without incident comes as a relief to the region. The drills (Undergo military training or do military exercises) saw the Chinese military not only cross the median of the Taiwan Strait but fire conventional missiles above Taiwan, aggressive acts that could have easily led to unintended escalation. That they did not lead to any incidents is credit to the sober (Serious and calm) response from Taiwan’s military, which said it monitored China’s exercises, some of which were held within 12 nautical miles of Taiwan, but chose to neither engage Chinese aircraft and warships, nor shoot down missiles. If the drills were certainly provocative, China’s justification is that they were a needed response to draw a red line (Draw a line means to put a limit on what you will do or allow to happen, esp. because you feel something is wrong) after what Beijing has seen as needless American provocation that triggered this entire crisis. The August 3 visit of U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan, the first such high-level engagement in 25 years, was in China’s view further evidence of Washington “hollowing out” (o remove the inside of (something)) its commitment to a One China Policy.
As the dust settles now, it is difficult to see what all three parties – the U.S., Taiwan and China – will ultimately gain from a visit that appears to have been driven more by Ms. Pelosi’s political inclinations (An attitude of mind) than any well-considered long-term strategic objectives. It is thus not hard to see why even U.S. President Joe Biden and the U.S. military had cautioned against a trip that brings no lasting strategic benefits for Washington. For Taiwan’s 23 million people and for President Tsai Ing-wen, the rare high-profile foreign visit was no doubt welcome in the face of increasing global isolation (A country’s withdrawal from international politics) on account of China’s pressure. That short-term benefit may, however, be offset (Make up for) by the fact that Ms. Pelosi has arguably left Taiwan with a far worse strategic environment. China’s military has indicated its actions have now heralded (to be a sign that something is going to happen soon) a new normal in military activity across the Taiwan Strait, bringing it ever closer to Taiwan’s shores. Beijing and Washington, meanwhile, are left picking up the pieces of an already strained (Not friendly) relationship that is now teetering (Move unsteadily) on the edge of an abyss (If someone is on the edge or brink of an abyss, they are about to enter into a very frightening or threatening situation). The focus must now turn to cooling the temperatures. Doing so will be easier said than done with the low levels of trust between the world’s two biggest powers. In response to Ms. Pelosi’s visit, Beijing last week said it will cut off (cease) military channels with Washington by cancelling three key dialogue mechanisms, that too at a time of heightened military tensions. War, it is said, is too important to be left to the generals. The same may be said of relations between nations: they should not be hostage (prisoner) to personal ambitions of politicians.
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