Taiwan leader warns of threat to democracy before leaving for US
President Tsai Ing-wen said the island faced threats from ‘overseas forces’, in a veiled reference to China.
Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen has said the island faced threats from “overseas forces”, in a veiled reference to China, as she left for the United States on her way to the Caribbean days after $2.2bn weapons deal with Washington.
An angered China, which claims self-ruled and democratic Taiwan as its own and views it as a wayward province, has called on the United States not to allow Tsai to transit there on her overseas tour.
Tai is spending four nights in the US in total, two on the way there and two on two the way back on a visit to four Caribbean allies. Tsai will go to New York on her way there, and then is expected to stop in Denver on the way back.
Tsai’s time in the US will be unusually long, as normally she spends just a night at a time on transit stops.
The US State Department has said there had been no change in the US “one-China” policy, under which Washington officially recognises Beijing and not Taipei, while assisting Taiwan.
Speaking at Taipei’s main international airport at Taoyuan, Tsai said she would share the values of freedom and transparency with Taiwan’s allies, and she was looking forward to finding more international space for Taiwan.
“Our democracy has not come easily, and is now facing threats and infiltration from overseas forces,” Tsai said, without naming any such force.
“These challenges are also common challenges faced by democracies all over the world. We will work with countries with similar ideas to ensure the stability of the democratic system.”
US defence deal
Tsai, who faces re-election in January, has repeatedly called for international support to defend Taiwan’s democracy in the face of Chinese threats.
Beijing has regularly sent military aircraft and ships to circle Taiwan on drills in the past few years.
Tsai last went to the US in March, stopping over in Hawaii at the end of a Pacific tour.
Seeking to bolster Taiwan’s defences, the US this week approved an arms sale worth an estimated $2.2bn for Taiwan, despite Chinese criticism of the deal.
The move would be Washington’s first big-ticket military sale to the democratically-governed island in decades, and comes amid deteriorating ties between the US and China, the world’s two largest economies that have been locked in an acrimonious trade war.
Taiwan has been trying to shore up its diplomatic alliances amid pressure from China, which has been whittling down its few remaining diplomatic allies, especially in the Caribbean and Latin America.
Aside from the US, Tsai will be visiting St Vincent and the Grenadines, St Lucia, St Kitts and Nevis, and Haiti.
Taiwan now has formal ties with only 17 countries, almost all small nations in Central America and the Pacific.