Trump says China’s Xi assured him that he won’t take action on Taiwan
Taiwan is a self-governing island democracy that Beijing claims as part of its territory, and US officials have long been worried that China may use military action against it.
US President Donald Trump has claimed that Chinese President Xi Jinping has assured him that Beijing will not pursue its long-standing objective of uniting Taiwan with mainland China while he is in office.“He has openly said, and his people have openly said at meetings, ‘We would never do anything while President Trump is president,’ because they know the consequences,” Trump said in an excerpt of an interview with the CBS program “60 Minutes” that aired Sunday.Trump said that his discussions with Xi on Thursday in South Korea, which mostly centred on US-China trade concerns, did not touch on the contentious issue of Taiwan. Nonetheless, the US president stated his confidence that China would not move on Taiwan during his administration.Asked if he would order US forces to defend Taiwan if China attacked, Trump demurred. “You’ll find out if it happens, and he understands the answer to that,” Trump said of Xi.In response, Liu Pengyu, spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said in a statement that China “will never allow any person or force to separate Taiwan from China in any way.“The Taiwan question is China’s internal affair, and it is the core of China’s core interests. How to resolve the Taiwan question is a matter for the Chinese people ourselves, and only the Chinese people can decide it,” the statement added.Pengyu did not answer directly to a query about whether Trump has received any assurances from Xi or Chinese officials about Taiwan.US “strategic ambiguity” on TaiwanUS officials have long been concerned about the possibility of China using military force against Taiwan, the self-ruled island democracy claimed by Beijing as part of its territory.It is US policy to make sure Taiwan has the resources to defend itself and to stop Beijing from changing its status unilaterally, but the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, which has governed US relations with the island, does not obligate Washington to intervene militarily in the case of an invasion.The United States, under both Republican and Democratic administrations, has maintained a policy of “strategic ambiguity” on Taiwan—trying not to tip its hand on whether the US would come to the island’s aid in such a scenario.The White House also did not provide further details about when Xi or Chinese officials had conveyed to Trump that military action on Taiwan was off the table for the duration of the Republican’s presidency.