Taiwan appoints new, British-educated intelligence chief

Tsai's office said that deputy foreign minister Tsai Ming-yen, who has previously served as Taiwan's de facto ambassador to the European Union, had been appointed as the new head of the National Security Bureau, replacing Chen Ming-tong who has resigned expressing a desire to "rest". Tsai, who has a doctorate from King's College London's department of war studies, has also previously worked as an advisor to Taiwan's defence ministry and China-policy making Mainland Affairs Council.


Reuters | Updated: 26-01-2023 17:09 IST | Created: 26-01-2023 16:59 IST
Taiwan appoints new, British-educated intelligence chief
Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen (Photo Credit: Twitter) Image Credit: ANI
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Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen appointed an intelligence chief on Thursday, a British-educated senior diplomat, as part of a broader government reshuffle currently underway and as the island faces growing military threats from China. Tsai's office said that deputy foreign minister Tsai Ming-yen, who has previously served as Taiwan's de facto ambassador to the European Union, had been appointed as the new head of the National Security Bureau, replacing Chen Ming-tong who has resigned expressing a desire to "rest".

Tsai, who has a doctorate from King's College London's department of war studies, has also previously worked as an advisor to Taiwan's defence ministry and China-policy making Mainland Affairs Council. The president hopes to rely on Tsai's expertise in regional security, foreign affairs, and international strategy to assist the national security team in the "interpretation and precise decision-making" for the situation with China and in the region, her office said.

The president also hopes he will "continue to promote the specialized tasks of the intelligence system and continue to strengthen the governance and innovation of intelligence agencies in the era of democratization". The two share a common family name but are not related.

China has been ramping up military and political pressure to try and get Taiwan to accept Beijing's sovereignty, including staging war games near the island in August. Taiwan's government rejects China's claims and says only the island's 23 million people can decide their future.

Tsai on Wednesday also tapped former vice president Chen Chien-jen as Taiwan's new premier, and she will on Friday hold a news conference to formally unveil a new cabinet. Former Premier Su Tseng-chang submitted his resignation last week along with that of his cabinet ahead of the widely expected government reshuffle.

Su's move followed the ruling Democratic Progressive Party's (DPP) trouncing at local polls in November, and comes as Taiwan gears up for presidential and parliamentary elections in early 2024.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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