Taiwan's Lai says he would tell Trump he hopes to continue arms purchases from US

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te expressed his hope to continue US arms purchases, calling them essential for peace, amidst growing pressure from China and concerns over US support for the island.

Taiwan's Lai says he would tell Trump he hopes to continue arms purchases from US

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te said Wednesday that if given the chance he would tell US President Donald Trump of his hope to continue US arms purchases, which Lai called essential for peace, while offering assurances that the island's future would not be decided by external forces.

Lai is marking two years in office, the halfway point of his term, under growing pressure from China, which sees Taiwan as a breakaway province to be retaken by force if necessary.

Trump's recent narrative on Taiwan also raised concerns about US traditional support for the island even without formal diplomatic ties.

Lai said if he could talk to Trump, he would emphasise that peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait was crucial for global security, alleging China was the ''destroyer'' of the strait's peace.

Lai said he also would tell Trump that Taiwan's increasing defence budget was a response to threats and purchases of US arms would be an essential means to safeguard the strait's stability. Lai said he believes ''only strength can bring peace''.

''No country has the right to annex Taiwan,'' Lai said he would tell Trump at the news briefing. ''Democracy and freedom should also not be seen as provocation.''.

Lai looks forward to more cooperation between Taiwan and the US and other democratic countries in promoting peace in the strait, he added.

Lai stands firm despite Xi's warning to the US.

========================.

Chinese President Xi Jinping last week issued a strong warning to the US, telling Trump during their Beijing summit that the ''Taiwan question'' is the most important issue in ties between China and the US and the two nations will ''have clashes and even conflicts'' without proper handling.

Trump in December approved a record-breaking, USD 11 billion arms package to Taiwan. In an interview aired Friday on Fox News as the US president wrapped up his visit to China, Trump said his approval of a new USD 14 billion arms package to Taiwan depended on China, describing the deal as ''a very good negotiating chip''.

Trump later told reporters he needed to talk to the person who is running Taiwan, without naming Lai, who Beijing deemed a separatist.

In his speech Wednesday, Lai said democracy is not a gift from the sky.

''Taiwan's future cannot be decided by external forces, nor can it be held hostage by fear, division, or short-term interests,'' he said, without specifying who the external forces are.

He added that Taiwan was willing to engage in healthy and orderly exchanges with China under the principles of equality and dignity, but firmly rejects united front tactics that ''package unification as peace''.

Beyond geopolitics, Taiwan is a major manufacturer of artificial-intelligence servers, computer chips and precision instruments. The AI boom has propelled Taiwan's leading technology companies to record profits and revenues. But observers worry the island's heavy reliance on computer chipmakers and other technology companies carries risk if the AI craze becomes a bubble.

Lai said he would roll out a USD 3.1 billion plan to accelerate the upgrading and transformation of small and medium-sized businesses and traditional industries and to have the tech industries drive traditional sectors.

Beijing slams Lai.

========.

China's Taiwan Affairs Office spokesperson Zhu Fenglian told reporters in Beijing that Lai's Facebook statement on Sunday, which alleged China was the cause of changing the status quo, was filled with ''lies and deception, hostility and confrontation'', according to Chinese official Xinhua News Agency.

She accused Lai of stubbornly insisting on Taiwan independence and inciting cross-strait opposition and confrontation.

''(Lai) is the destroyer of the status quo of Taiwan's strait,'' she said, according to the Xinhua report.

China and Taiwan have been governed separately since 1949 when the Communist Party rose to power in Beijing following a civil war. Defeated Nationalist Party forces fled to Taiwan, which later transitioned from martial law to multiparty democracy.

The US and Taiwan had formal diplomatic relations until 1979, when President Jimmy Carter's administration recognised and established relations with Beijing. Still, the US is required by law to ensure Taiwan can defend itself.

TRENDING

OPINION / BLOG / INTERVIEW

Frugal AI can support SDGs by expanding who builds and benefits from AI

Health AI risks stalling in ‘partial adoption trap’

Workers need AI interaction skills to unlock GenAI productivity gains

AI is not democratic unless it redistributes power

DevShots

Latest News

Connect us on

LinkedIn Quora Youtube RSS
Give Feedback