The Pursuit Of Peace, Talks Of One China & Unification In A Changing World

Taiwan just became the center of a high-stakes geopolitical moment.

For the first time in a decade, a senior Kuomintang leader has visited mainland China—and now Chairwoman Cheng Liwun is set to meet Xi Jinping. But here’s the twist: the KMT isn’t even in power in Taiwan.

So why does this meeting matter?

As tensions rise globally, Taiwan finds itself caught between two superpowers. The ruling government leans toward the United States, pushing for increased defense spending and deeper military ties. Meanwhile, China is signaling that peaceful unification may still be on the table—and the KMT could be the bridge.

This video breaks down:

Why this meeting is happening NOW

The role of Taiwan’s internal politics

The “First Island Chain” strategy shaping US-China rivalry

How global conflicts (like the Middle East) are influencing Asian geopolitics

Whether Taiwan could shift toward peaceful unification instead of war

With shifting alliances, rising uncertainty about US security guarantees, and changing public opinion in Taiwan, the stakes couldn’t be higher.

Is Taiwan heading toward conflict—or a historic political shift?

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