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CIA Director William Burns in Washington on April 15. Photo: Reuters

Chinese calculations on Taiwan affected by Ukraine conflict, says US CIA director William Burns

  • William Burns said: ‘The Chinese leadership is looking very carefully … at the costs and consequences of effort to use force to gain control over Taiwan’
  • Burns said the US believed China was unsettled by the reputational damage of being associated with the ‘brutishness’ of Vladimir Putin’s military action
Ukraine war

US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director William Burns said on Saturday that China is closely monitoring Russia’s conflict in Ukraine and that it is affecting Chinese leaders’ calculations over Taiwan, which Beijing considers a breakaway province to be reunified with the mainland.

Burns, speaking at a Financial Times event in Washington, said the Chinese government had been struck by Ukraine’s fierce resistance to Russia’s invasion and by the economic costs Russia is bearing.

“I think the Chinese leadership is looking very carefully at all this – at the costs and consequences of any effort to use force to gain control over Taiwan,” Burns said.

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Life resumes in Berdyansk, Ukraine, but not all is normal under Russian occupation

Life resumes in Berdyansk, Ukraine, but not all is normal under Russian occupation

He cautioned, however, that it would not shift Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s long-term goals over Taiwan.

“I don’t for a minute think that this has eroded Xi’s determination over time to gain control over Taiwan,” said Burns. “But I think it’s something that’s affecting their calculation about how and when they go about doing that.”

China has refused to condemn Russia’s war in Ukraine and has criticised Western sanctions on Moscow.

China tells US it will not be scared off by sanctions over Taiwan

Beijing and Moscow declared a “no-limits” strategic partnership several weeks before the February 24 invasion, and have been forging closer energy and security ties in recent years to push back on the United States and the West.

But Burns said the US believed China was unsettled by the reputational damage of being associated with the “brutishness” of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s military action.

“I think what the bitter experience, in many ways, of Putin’s Russia in Ukraine over the last 10 or 11 weeks has done is demonstrate that that friendship actually does have some limits,” Burns said.

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