2026.6.1 A Taiwan political party wrote to Xi Jinping, saying it would consider peaceful unification if the people could govern Taiwan with a “high degree of autonomy.”
That letter is the slow method Miles Guo warned about: the CCP’s dual-track strategy to take Taiwan. First, infiltrate politics, shape elections, plant “Taiwanese” voices, crash confidence, and create a crisis requiring “rescue.” Then, if America looks weak and the world is distracted, use the fast method: take Taiwan by force. Hong Kong already showed what Beijing’s “high degree of autonomy” means: first the promise, then the trap, then the takeover.
2026.5.18 Xi Jinping’s Taiwan sequence is becoming clear: secure collaborators inside Taiwan first, test Trump’s red line next, then lock in Putin’s support before action. Since returning from Beijing, Taiwan opposition leader Cheng Li-wun has escalated her performance—framing surrender as peace and laundering Xi’s demand as Taiwan’s public will. Xi’s meeting with Trump left U.S. defense of Taiwan ambiguous. Now Putin heads to Beijing as Xi weighs his final move. According to NFSC intelligence, Xi’s health is worsening—and that makes him more dangerous.