(Melbourne Bloomberg) experts warned that China and the United States' deadlock on Taiwan's issue "basically unstable", and the foundation of maintaining the current status of decades between China and the United States has been loose.

Beijing's increasing economic and military influence may set off a wave of militaryization in the Asia -Pacific region.

Evan Feigenbaum, Vice President of the US Think Capital Capita International Peace Foundation, said at a seminar hosted by the Asian Association in Melbourne on Wednesday that the strategic competition between China and the United States intensified"Chicken and ducks talk" on the top.

He warned that the basic pillars of the stable positions in the middle, Taiwan and the beauty positions have been eroded for decades.He said that the balance of power is tilting to China. For China, the temptation of using this trend is getting greater.

Fang Aiwen, who once worked as a U.S. State Department, said that the importance of this problem will grow in index level in the next few years.

Raja Mohan, a visiting professor of visitor to the National University of Singapore, pointed out that in recent years, China's economic and military strength has greatly improved, forcing the Asia -Pacific countries to compete for national defense capabilities.Mohan said that taking into account Beijing's military delivery capabilities, Japan, South Korea, and India are expanding military power, and more military layouts will appear around China.

The

Seminar discusses Japan, India, Australia, and the United States.Mohan mentioned India's "historic transformation", and India has been in contact with the United States and its allies from the end of independence.

However, Shafiah F. Muhibat, a researcher at the US think tank strategy and international research center in Indonesia, believes that most of Southeast Asia's "Safety Dialogue" and the "three sides of Australia, Britain, and the United States of Australia, Britain, and the United StatesAUKUS (Aukus) "feels complicated."

Muhiba said that although Southeast Asia feels that it is now the main stage of the great country's politics, it is also worried that this development does not seem to meet regional interests.

She pointed out that Indonesia and other countries believe that the establishment of new organizations will destroy the stability and value of traditional organizations such as Asia Gyan.