UPDATE 5-Taiwan says President Lai would be happy to talk to Trump

Taiwan ​President Lai Ching-te would be happy to speak with U.S. President Donald ‌Trump, ​its foreign ministry said on Thursday, in what would be an unprecedented call between the leaders of the world's most potent military and the island claimed by China. It is still unclear when such talks might occur, but the decision could roil Washington's relations with Beijing and help resolve the fate of a massive arms ‌package the United States is considering for democratically-governed Taiwan.

UPDATE 5-Taiwan says President Lai would be happy to talk to Trump

Taiwan ​President Lai Ching-te would be happy to speak with U.S. President Donald ‌Trump, ​its foreign ministry said on Thursday, in what would be an unprecedented call between the leaders of the world's most potent military and the island claimed by China.

It is still unclear when such talks might occur, but the decision could roil Washington's relations with Beijing and help resolve the fate of a massive arms ‌package the United States is considering for democratically-governed Taiwan. U.S. and Taiwan presidents have not spoken directly since Washington shifted diplomatic recognition to Beijing from Taipei in 1979. China considers Taiwan its own territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under Beijing's control.

On Wednesday, Trump said he would speak to Lai, the second time in a week he has done so, dispelling initial speculation that his first mention of it after his ‌Beijing summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping was a verbal slip. China responded to Trump's remarks by telling the United States to handle the Taiwan issue with "extreme caution".

TIMING OF ANY TALKS UNCLEAR Taiwan's foreign ministry reiterated ‌comments Lai made on Wednesday that if he got the opportunity to speak to Trump, he would say China was undermining peace and his government would keep the status quo across the Taiwan Strait.

"In addition to being committed to maintaining the stable status quo in the Taiwan Strait, President Lai is also happy to discuss these matters with President Trump," the ministry added, without elaborating. The secretary-general of the Taiwan National Security Council, Joseph Wu, told lawmakers that the government must "keep a low profile" for now on the topic, and ⁠if there is ​any progress, it will be made public.

"If these communications and ⁠dialogues can continue to be elevated to higher levels, and if we can maintain a dialogue that contributes to regional peace and stability, this would be of great significance not only to Taiwan but also to democratic nations and the Indo-Pacific region as a ⁠whole," he said. Addressing Trump's use of the words "Taiwan problem", which echoes Beijing's phrasing, Wu said Taiwan is not the one making problems.

"China is creating all kinds of problems along the first island chain," he said, referring to an area that stretches ​from Japan down through Taiwan and into the Philippines. "China is the problem."

In Beijing, a spokesperson for China's foreign ministry said the government's opposition to U.S. arms sales and official exchanges between the United ⁠States and Taiwan remained consistent, clear and firm. China urges the United States to "handle the Taiwan issue with extreme caution and stop sending wrong signals to the separatist forces of Taiwan independence", Guo Jiakun told reporters.

In late 2016, Trump, as president-elect, broke decades of U.S. diplomatic precedent by speaking ⁠directly, ​by telephone, with Taiwan's then President Tsai Ing-wen. China has rebuffed multiple offers of talks from Lai, calling him a "separatist".

TRUMP-XI SUMMIT Trump, who met Xi in Beijing last week where Taiwan was a major focus of the talks, is weighing whether to approve a new arms sales package for the island, which Reuters has reported could be worth some $14 billion.

The United States is bound by the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act to provide Taiwan with ⁠the means to defend itself, despite a lack of formal diplomatic ties. Speaking to reporters in parliament on Thursday, Taiwan Defence Minister Wellington Koo said the United States has repeatedly reaffirmed that its policy towards Taiwan ⁠is unchanged.

In addition to peace and stability in the strait ⁠being a core U.S. interest, providing Taiwan with defensive capabilities through arms sales in accordance with the Taiwan Relations Act is established U.S. policy, he added. "Given that U.S. policy toward Taiwan remains unchanged, I think we remain cautiously optimistic about arms purchases," Koo said.

Beijing has been angered by longstanding U.S. military support for Taiwan to deter ‌Chinese military action, including arms sales. Taiwan's government ‌rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims.

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