Failed Chinese Invasion of Taiwan

The Taiwan-China War was a war fought between the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China (Taiwan) and their respective allies. The use of nuclear weapons in the war was prohibited and neither side dared to strike. The war resulted in '''Taiwan's reinstatement as the sole governing body of China, Hong Kong being handed back over to the British government, and East Turkestan being granted independence and seceding. The war also resulted in all CCP party members being removed from China's government and replacing the government with a Presidential-Republic style of government. The flag of the now new Republic of China (wiki coming soon for that)''' was also changed.

Pre-Conflict
The first warnings of a Taiwanese invasion were shown in early February of 2022 when the Chinese government said it would invade Taiwan if the United States continued to help Taiwan arm and defend itself. The US President at the time, Joe Biden decided to not head China's warning.

Diplomats were however still sent to Bejing to talk with Xi Jinping on avoiding a protentional war or conflict over Taiwan. While this was happening however, a US Naval warship struck a Chinese ship and sank it off the coast of Quanzhou, China. Even though evidence proved that the sinking wasn't actually done by the United States but rather a staged Chinese act, Xi Jinping decided to declare formal war on Taiwan and the United States and stop peace negotiations.

Conflict Begins
Once the war officially begins, things immediately start to look grim for China as western powers started to rally behind the US and send support to Taiwan and have ships around China's coastline. Russia, and Cuba, some of China's closest allies chose to opt out of the war due to high levels of government thinking the war is too much of a risk. The European Union decides with a majority vote to send help to Taiwan and its allies, and the United Kingdom decides to do the same.

With ships lining China's coastline and blocking trade as well as new sanctions from US President Joe Biden and other world leaders, confidence even within China's highest levels of power is at an all-time low. Xi Jinping decides to deploy troops to the coastline and send ships out to the coast to meet US ships and drive them away and finally invade, however before the plan goes through, informants for the Central Intelligence Agency get ahold of the plans for a new strategy and invasion. They notify the nearby allied country of South Korea and they send ships to help re-enforce the blockade they have in China's waters.

The Conflict Turns on China
With more re-enforcements arriving to the coastline of China to create a blockade, doubts don't get any better within the regime and the outside worlds image of China being a powerful country quickly fades away. The United States as well as the European Union, realizing that neutralizing China was a success, decide to try to negotiate a peace treaty, however the Chinese government, embarrassed at the failure of invading Taiwan, decide to not accept the terms of peace and send more troops and ships out to the coast. Seeing this as an act of aggression, the United States decides to call upon the EU and now the rest of NATO to decide what action to take. To further stop conflict and prevent mass casualties from war, the allies decide to position some ships protecting Taiwan and position most ships at Seoul.

The Invasion of the Mainland and the Battle of Beijing
With ships docked near Seoul planning continues with NATO, the EU, and the United States. They determine the best course of action is to surround most of China's coastline with most ships near Taiwan and Beijing, deploy ground troops at Tianjin and have them head towards Langfang and finally reach Beijing. Once this plan is formulated, they are able to follow through with the plan, ships surround Tianjin and deploy ground troops to enter the area. As soon as they were deployed however, the Chinese Liberation Army began to fire at the ships and troops. Despite letting most troops dock at the ports, the CLA wasn't going to let NATO and their allies get past the crucial point of Langfang and march to Beijing.

The Chinese Liberation Army ends up holding of NATO and their allies for around a month before falling back to Langfang after a lot of small and large-scale battles. Looking for a way to peace, NATO urges China to sign a peace treaty, however this again fails as leadership within the highest levels of the CCP believe that the Chinese Liberation Army will be able to take back territory by the next year, however this ended up being a bad choice on the part of the Chinese government as it led to the later downfall and Fall of Beijing.