In an about-face escalation of its campaign to strangle Taiwan’s political independence, Beijing has formally banished two senior Taiwanese ministers from China, branding them “die-hard secessionists” and threatening them with lifelong punishment—a move Taipei has denounced as “clumsy” intimidation that will only inflame public anger.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office announced on Wednesday that Taiwanese Interior Minister Liu Shyh-fang and Education Minister Cheng Ying-yao, along with their relatives, are now permanently barred from entering mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau. The officials were accused of “Taiwan independence” activities, bringing the total number of Taiwanese figures on Beijing’s public blacklist to 14, a roster that already includes Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim and Defense Minister Wellington Koo.

“Threats and Intimidation” vs. “Safeguarding Sovereignty”
Taipei’s Mainland Affairs Council issued a furious rebuke, declaring that “threats and intimidation will never shake the resolve of the Taiwanese people.” It accused Beijing of attempting to create a “chilling effect” to coerce Taiwanese into abandoning democracy and warned that “all serious consequences must be borne entirely by the Chinese side.”
China’s spokesperson, Chen Binhua, framed the banishments as a targeted strike against a “small number of die-hards” necessary to “fundamentally safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity.” In a more sinister development, the office also named a Taiwanese prosecutor, Chen Shu-Yi, as an accomplice, calling on the public to submit evidence so China could impose “severe punishment” and hold her “accountable for life,” effectively claiming criminal jurisdiction over the island’s judicial officials.
Why It Matters
The immediate aftermath of the raid gives way to a vastly more complex and dangerous phase, defined by a power struggle in Caracas, the threat of a wider regional conflict, and profound uncertainty about who will truly control Venezuela’s future.
With Maduro gone, the battle for control of the state has already begun among his former inner circle. The interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, represents a pragmatic faction that the U.S. believes it can work with, but her authority is not absolute.
She faces a direct challenge from Diosdado Cabello, a powerful Chavista hardliner with significant control over Venezuela’s armed paramilitaries (colectivos) and intelligence apparatus. Cabello is also indicted by the U.S. on drug trafficking charges.
Whether Rodríguez can consolidate power or whether Cabello will attempt to depose her or make the country ungovernable remains the central, unanswered political question. The loyalty of Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López and the fractured Venezuelan military will be the decisive factor in this internal war.
The Conflicting U.S. Visions: Protectorate or Pressure?
The Trump administration has sent wildly contradictory signals about its role. President Trump has repeatedly stated the U.S. will “run” Venezuela as a temporary protectorate, primarily to seize control and revitalize its collapsed oil industry.
However, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has walked this back, stating the U.S. will not govern directly but will instead exert “maximum pressure” through oil sanctions and blockades to force policy changes.
This contradiction reflects a deep internal divide: one faction seeks a narrow deal for oil and migration control with the existing regime, while another, led by Rubio, pushes for a full democratic transition. Trump has already claimed a deal for 30-50 million barrels of oil, testing Rodríguez’s willingness to comply. Failure to deliver on U.S. demands could trigger further military action, as Trump has explicitly threatened.
















