Australia says “drums of war are beating” MPs: Communist China must be subdued

On April 27, Australian Federal Senator Eric Abetz said that China’s Communist dictatorship was “barbaric” and “cruel” and that a free country must “brought to heel. to heel”.

In an interview with Sky News host Chris Kenny, Abetz said the Chinese Communist Party “has not prepared its own defense, but is doggedly aggressive in the (Asia-Pacific) region.

“It’s important to remember that we are dealing with a brutal communist dictatorship, a barbaric (regime) that has locked up a million of its own people in concentration camps, torn up international agreements with Britain on Hong Kong, forced organ harvesting, persecution of Christians, Falun Gong practitioners, Tibetans, Mongolians… …” said Abetz.

“We are taking a very tough stance in the international arena, with the help of other countries, to make sure that this brutal dictatorship is subdued.” He said.

Australia Getting tougher on the Chinese Communist Party: the “drums of war” are beating
While the war wolves of the Chinese Communist Party’s foreign ministry continue to jump to their feet, the Australian government is gradually becoming more resolute, with senior government officials frequently issuing tough statements directly targeting the Chinese Communist Party.

On Sunday, Mike Pezzullo, secretary-general of the Australian Department of Home Affairs, said on the same day of the ANZAC Day that the global “drums of war” were being beaten and the possibility of war breaking out in the Taiwan Strait was rising.

“Today, as free nations, we are once again hearing the drums of war being beaten (drums of war) and watching with concern as issues move in a militarized direction that until recent years we did not recognize as a catalyst for war.” He said.

Pezzullo said Australia must work for peace, but not at the expense of freedom, and “let us continue to search unceasingly for opportunities for peace while once again preparing for the curse of war.”

Australian Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews said she agreed with Pezzullo that “the overall message from the government is that we need to be vigilant, but not alarmed.”

And in an April 25 interview with Australia’s defense minister Peter Dutton, when asked if the possibility of war in the Taiwan Strait was rising, he said, “I don’t think it should be underestimated,” and mentioned that Australia had a “high level of preparedness” for it. high level of preparedness”.