Chance of China, Taiwan Conflict Should Not Be Discounted, Warns Australian Defense Minister

The chance of a conflict involving China over Taiwan "should not be discounted," but Australia will work with its allies in the region to try and maintain peace, Australian Defense Minister Peter Dutton said on Sunday.
Dutton told
the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) that China had been increasingly clear
about its reunification ambitions with Taiwan.
"I don't
think it should be discounted," Dutton said when asked whether the
prospects of a battle over Taiwan were growing.
"People need to be realistic about the activity," Dutton added. "There is militarization of bases across the region. Obviously, there is a significant amount of activity and there is an animosity between Taiwan and China."
China claims
democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory and has never renounced the
use of force to bring the island under Beijing's control.
Taiwan's
government says only Taiwan's people can decide its future, and has denounced
Chinese threats.
Speaking in
Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said he hoped Australia
was aware of the sensitive nature of the issue and could "avoid sending
any wrong signal to Taiwan independence forces".
Australia's
diplomatic relations with China, its largest trading partner, have worsened
since Canberra called for an international inquiry into the origins of the
coronavirus which was first reported in the Chinese city Wuhan, prompting trade
reprisals from Beijing.
Dutton added
that while there is a high level of preparedness for the Australian defense
force to meet any threats in the region against the country's allies, Canberra
will work to try to maintain peace.
"We want
to make sure we continue to be a good neighbor in the region, that we work with
our partners and with our allies and nobody wants to see conflict between China
and Taiwan or anywhere else," Dutton said.