China reassured the US that it will not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons over Taiwan as semi-official nuclear talks between US and Chinese delegates resumed in March for the first time in five years, Reuters reported on Friday.
At the first semi-official bilateral nuclear talks in five years, Chinese delegates in March reassured their US counterparts that Beijing will not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against Taiwan, Reuters reported on Friday.
The Chinese assurance that Beijing will not offensively use nuclear weapons against Taiwan is good news. However, such talks cannot replace formal negotiations, and the truth is that China recently rejected US efforts to resume bilateral arms control talks. Moreover, Beijing's claim to maintain a no-first-use policy is increasingly at odds with its growing nuclear stockpile. To make the world safer, China needs to enter into basic negotiations to avoid the risks of uncontrolled nuclear escalation.
The talks may be an encouraging sign, but the reporting paints a biased picture. It is the US that is fueling the nuclear race and engaging in nuclear saber-rattling to allegedly "protect" Taiwan. Moreover, Washington dismissed Chinese calls for a no-first-use treaty between nuclear powers, while holding many times more nuclear warheads than China. China remains convinced that the only way to avoid the danger of an apocalyptic disaster is through nuclear disarmament.