China’s Xi Jinping says Taiwan reunification is ‘unstoppable’



Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed to take Taiwan during his New Year’s Eve speech on Wednesday as he called reunification “unstoppable.”

As Beijing concluded its latest intense military drills around the democratic island, Xi issued a renewed warning that China will annex the country, using force if necessary.

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“The reunification of our motherland, a trend of the times, is unstoppable,” Xi said in a speech televised by state broadcaster CCTV.

In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, Chinese President Xi Jinping delivers his 2026 New Year message in Beijing on Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. AP

“Compatriots on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are bound by blood ties thicker than water,” he added.

US intelligence has previously warned that China is likely to launch a military operation to annex Taiwan, which it views as part of its territory, within the decade.

During his speech, Xi highlighted the celebration of “Taiwan Retrocession Day,” a holiday created this year to mark the anniversary of the end of Japan’s imperial rule in Taiwan in 1945.

China’s claim to the nation has been followed with a show of force, with the People’s Liberation Army launching live-fire military drills surrounding Taiwan on Monday and Tuesday.

Explosive barrels placed by Taiwan military at the Tamsui river, as part of a series of emergency combat readiness drills, in response to China conducting “Justice Mission 2025” military drills around Taiwan, December 31, 2025. REUTERS

The latest drills saw China’s forces carry out a simulation of blockades around Taiwan’s main ports, with Beijing’s navy, air force, rocket force and coast guard deployed for the exercise.

The drills, dubbed “Justice Mission 2025,” were held closer to Taiwan than China’s previous military exercises, sparking a tense showdown with Taipei.

Taiwan remains on high alert on Wednesday following the drills, with its emergency maritime response center still monitoring the Chinese fleet.

Hsieh Jih-sheng, deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence at Taiwan’s defence ministry, points at a map during a press conference about China’s military drills around Taiwan, in Taipei, Taiwan December 30, 2025. REUTERS

Taipei’s defense ministry said there were still a large number of Chinese planes and vessels in its response area, with Taiwan’s military ordered to maintain an “appropriate contingency mechanism.” 

“The Chinese Communist Party’s aggressive and militaristic provocations endanger regional security and stability, and have been condemned by democratic allies in the international community,” the defense department said in a statement.

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te also rebuked Xi’s aggression during his own New Year’s Eve speech, comparing his country to the European democracies that faced a threat from Nazi Germany in the 1930s.


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