Taiwan to bolster military ties with US, President Tsai meets American lawmakers

Washington diplomatically recognises Beijing over Taipei, but is also the self-governing island's most important international benefactor and supports Taipei's right to decide its own future.
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen (C) and Taiwanese officials pose for photos with a U.S. delegation during a meeting at the Presidential Office in Taipei,  Feb. 21, 2023. (Photo | AP)
Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen (C) and Taiwanese officials pose for photos with a U.S. delegation during a meeting at the Presidential Office in Taipei,  Feb. 21, 2023. (Photo | AP)

Taiwan will boost military exchanges with the United States to curb "authoritarian expansionism", President Tsai Ing-wen said Tuesday after meeting with visiting US lawmakers.

The five-day US congressional visit comes after a top US defence official reportedly made a rare stopover to the self-ruled island while Washington-Beijing tensions flared over alleged Chinese spy balloons.

"Taiwan and the United States continue to bolster military exchanges," Tsai said after convening with the US delegation at her office in Taipei.

"Going forward, Taiwan will cooperate even more actively with the United States and other democratic partners to confront such global challenges as authoritarian expansionism and climate change."

Tsai did not provide further details on what the future exchanges might entail.

Washington diplomatically recognises Beijing over Taipei, but is also the self-governing island's most important international benefactor and supports Taipei's right to decide its own future.

Beijing, which claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has vowed to seize it one day, opposes any official exchanges with the democracy and has reacted with anger to a flurry of trips to the island by US politicians in recent years.

In Taipei, Tsai said it was time "to explore even more opportunities for cooperation" between the US and Taiwan.

"Together we can continue to safeguard the values of democracy and freedom," she said.

Diplomacy, defence and semiconductors

Relations between Beijing and Washington have grown increasingly tense, and China responded angrily to a Financial Times report about a weekend visit by Michael Chase, the deputy assistant US secretary of defence for China.

The British newspaper said Chase was the most senior Pentagon official to visit the island since 2019.

In Taipei, California representative Ro Khanna, a member of a newly created US House committee on strategic competition with China's Communist Party, said he was leading the bi-partisan delegation's visit to expand "the partnership on military and defence" and to shore up ties with the island's world-leading semiconductor industry.

"We are here to affirm the shared values between the United States and Taiwan, a commitment to democracy, a commitment to freedom," he said on Tuesday.

Khanna added that he "particularly appreciated" a meeting with Morris Chang, founder of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), which is the world's largest contract chipmaker.

The global semiconductor industry has been upended by an ongoing economic slowdown dampening demand as well as a raft of US export controls aimed at preventing China from obtaining advanced chips.

Relations between the world's two largest economies dipped to a low point in August as China staged war games near Taiwan following a visit by Nancy Pelosi, then speaker of the US House of Representatives.

Both sides recently signalled hopes for a reset, but at a weekend meeting with US chief diplomat Antony Blinken, China's foreign minister Wang Yi accused Washington of harbouring a "misguided" perception of Beijing.

Blinken has previously warned that China may be stepping up its timeframe for a possible invasion of Taiwan.

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