China Accuses US Of Arrogance Over Taiwan Deal

China's state media has accused the United States of "arrogance" and "double standards" in pursuing arms sales to Taiwan. The state-run China Daily and the Global Times also warned that China's threats of retaliation were real. The Obama administration approved the $6.4bn arms sale to Taiwan last week. China has warned of "serious harm" to relations between the two powers, the suspension of military contact and sanctions against the firms involved. The US has said it will go ahead with the sale anyway. China's state media said President Barack Obama must have been "insincere" when he promised not to "contain" China. The US move "exposes [its] usage of double standards and hypocrisy on major issues related to China's core interests," the China Daily said. "Washington's arrogance also reflects the stark reality of how a nation's interests could be trampled upon by another," it added. The Global Times, which is run by the People's Daily, the Communist Party's propaganda mouthpiece, said: "It's time the US was made to feel the heat for the continuing arms sales to Taiwan. "It would be folly to underestimate Chinese unity over the Taiwan question. Punishing companies that sell weapons to Taiwan is a move that would be supported by most Chinese." The People's Daily said in a commentary that the arms sales showed Washington's "rude and unreasonable Cold War thinking". "When it comes down to it, the United States is still drawing lines based on ideology and coming up with a million ways to stymie China's development and progress," the paper's overseas edition said. One China? Taiwan has been ruled by a separate government from China since the end of the civil war in 1949, but China still considers the island to be part of its territory. Beijing has more than 1,000 missiles pointed at Taiwan and has threatened to use force to bring it under its control if the island moves towards formal independence. Defence ties between Washington and Beijing have been on ice for several years because of differences over Taiwan, though the two countries' leaders pledged to improve them in 2009. The United States switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, but it remains Taiwan's biggest ally and is obliged by the Taiwan Relations Act to help in the island's defence. The US State Department said on Saturday that the weapons sale contributed to "security and stability" between Taiwan and China. But China said the row would endanger co-operation with the US on "key international and regional issues." Ties between the US and China are already strained by rows over trade and internet censorship.