Formal Ties With U.S.? Not For Now, Says Taiwan Foreign Minister NPR 20200922
Taiwan is not pursuing formal diplomatic ties with the United States for now, but there is "a lot" of room to further strengthen relations, Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said in an interview after unprecedented visits by two senior U.S. officials.
In August, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar traveled
to Taiwan, and last week Under Secretary of State Keith Krach visited
the island. They were the highest ranking
U.S. officials to travel to Taiwan since Washington cut formal diplomatic relations
with Taipei in 1979 to establish ties
with Beijing.
The visits come against a backdrop of deepening mistrust and sharply deteriorating
relations between the United States and China.
"We are not seeking full
diplomatic relations with the United States at this moment,"
Wu told NPR by Skype on Sunday.
"But, certainly, there's a lot of room
for us to explore how to strengthen the relations between Taiwan and the
United States, and we have been advocating that Taiwan and the United States
should further strengthen the economic relations, trade relations, political relations, even security relations."
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There has already been "tremendous advancement" on those fronts,
and he called Krach's visit "monumental."
The cozier relationship between Washington and Taipei has angered Beijing.
While Krach was in Taiwan, China ordered dozens of military planes to make
forays across the median line that divides the Taiwan Strait, in a bid to rattle
Taipei.
Crossing the
line
Beijing considers the self-ruled democracy a part of China and has vowed to
unite the island politically with the mainland, by force if necessary. The Chinese
government effectively bans countries from diplomatically recognizing both
itself and Taiwan, and has kept Taiwan out of most major multinational organizations,
including the United Nations.
Wu said the increase in menacing flights, and Chinese naval incursions into
Taiwan-controlled waters, were a concern.
"Crossing into the mid-line of the
Taiwan Strait is particularly alarming,"
he said.
"The median line of the Taiwan Strait has been there to maintain peace
and stability across the Taiwan Strait, and China has
been violating that status quo."
Taking steps to deepen ties with the United States, including by welcoming
senior U.S. officials, was the right choice, he said.
"We see China has become more threatening and they seem to be more capable
than before," Wu said, adding the risk of military action against Taiwan may
be elevated due to domestic difficulties in China.
"Taiwan might be an easy scapegoat for the
Chinese government, and therefore we understand the possibility for China
to think about using military force against Taiwan, and we have been staying vigilant."
The U.S. government is bound by the Taiwan Relations Act to provide Taiwan
"defense articles and defense services."
The Trump administration last year approved the sale of $8 billion worth of
F-16 fighter jets and other kit to Taiwan. Reuters
reported earlier this month that the U.S. was planning to sell Taiwan a range of
other weapon systems.
Wu said Taiwan hopes the U.S. continues to provide
such "defensive articles" to Taiwan, but that the island was not relying
on the United States to intervene in the event of a clash with China.
"Taiwan's defense is our own risk.
It's our own
responsibility, and we try to prepare ourselves for the future scenarios," he said.
Asked if he felt that Taiwan was a pawn in the Trump administration's larger
brawl with Beijing, Wu pointed to U.S. arms sales and bipartisan support for Taiwan.
"We don't feel that we are being used."
COVID-19 success
Taiwan's relative success at combating the COVID-19 pandemic had raised its
profile on the international stage, and that the visits by Azar and Krach were a
direct result, Wu said.
Taiwan, with a population of 23 million, has been heralded as a public health
model for its coronavirus response. According
to the Taiwan Centers for Disease Control,
there have been some 500 confirmed cases of COVID-19, and just seven deaths since
the outbreak began.
China's imposition of a controversial National
Security Law on Hong Kong in late June also helped build international sympathy
for Taiwan.
"Many people around the world started asking
the question, who will be the next? And I think the conclusion
is that Taiwan might be the next," he said.
Wu said the imposition of the National Security Law and Beijing's efforts
to limit the cultural and religious autonomy of ethnic Uighurs,
Tibetans
and Mongolians,
brought to mind Martin Niemöller's post-World
War II poem "First
They Came..." Its verses lament
the silence of German society in the face of Hitler's rise to power and his regime's
attacks on different political and religious groups.
"If you look at this historical lesson of the
victims of the Nazis, I think we might be going through the same issue," Wu said.
"Taiwan is on the front line of the democracies
fighting for freedom, democracy and democratic way of life. We have the responsibility
to make sure that democracy is successful, and if we want to make sure that
democracy in Taiwan is a success, I would certainly urge the international community
to voice more support for Taiwan."
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