Trump says he will discuss Taiwan arms sales during summit with China's Xi
The issue has emerged as a point of tension with Beijing, which has repeatedly warned Washington about the sales
Taiwanese soldiers taking part in drills during the
annual Han Kuang Exercise on the Penghu Islands in July 2024.
President Donald Trump said he will discuss U.S. arms sales to Taiwan
with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at a meeting this week, a move that risks
undermining America’s longstanding support for the island.
Ahead of his visit to Beijing for the highly anticipated leaders’ summit,
Trump was asked on Monday if he would talk about weapons shipments to Taipei
with Xi.
“I’m going to have that discussion,” Trump said. “President Xi would like
us not to. And I’ll have that discussion.”
As part of former President Ronald Reagan’s so-called Six Assurances to
Taipei in 1982, the U.S. said it had not agreed to any prior consultation with
Beijing on arms sales to Taiwan. Any move by Trump to negotiate the transfers
directly with Xi — something he has previously floated — would trample on that
diplomatic tradition.
The issue has emerged as a point of tension with Beijing, which has
repeatedly warned Washington about the sales. It’s unclear if Trump plans to
discuss the sales themselves — something he’s said previously — or just Xi’s
opposition to them. The U.S. president said he didn’t plan to make the issue a
primary focus of the conversation, telling reporters, “you’ll bring up Taiwan,
I think, more than I would.”
Still, Trump’s comments could ruffle feathers in Congress. Earlier, a
bipartisan group of senators urged the president to advance a US$14 billion
arms package for Taiwan and signal to Xi this week that U.S. support for the
self-governing island is non-negotiable.
The letter from eight senators, dated May 8 and released Monday, stressed
the arms purchase approved by Congress in January 2025 is “vital to our own
national interests.” Foreign military sales typically take years to go from
approval to delivery of weapons.
The lawmakers’ push, which includes a plea for Trump to make clear that
“America’s support for Taiwan is inviolable,” highlighted a key disagreement
between the U.S. and China.
While Taiwan is expected to be on the agenda at the Trump-Xi summit, no
changes in U.S. policy toward the democratic island are expected, a U.S.
official said Sunday. A senior Taiwanese official expressed concern last month
that Taiwan would be put “on the menu” of the talks between Trump and Xi.
“Xi will reinforce China’s opposition to Taiwan arms sales, maybe even
tie it to critical-minerals leverage, and that could have a chilling effect on
future arms sales,” said Jennifer Welch, Chief Geoeconomics Analyst at
Bloomberg Economics in Washington. “If Trump gets the impression — or direct
message from Xi — that China hates those sales so much that it may once again
put critical minerals at risk, that could lead to further delays.”China
considers Taiwan part of its territory and has vowed to claim it someday,
despite never having controlled it. Officials in Taiwan maintain the island’s
de facto independence and reiterate that it has never been governed by Beijing.
Last week, Taiwan passed a US$25 billion special defence budget despite
what the U.S. lawmakers called “extraordinary and sustained pressure from
Beijing.” The U.S. lawmakers praised the Taiwanese budget as a sign of a
commitment to self-defence, as the Trump administration calls for partners and
allies to take a greater stake in their own defence.
“The vast majority of this new budget will fund U.S.-provided defensive
arms pending notification to Congress, including counter-drone assets, an
integrated battle command system and medium-range munitions,” the lawmakers
wrote.
By contrast, the senators said a Chinese invasion of Taiwan would have
wide-ranging impacts and that “American families would suffer from severe and
long-term inflation, supply chain disruptions that would destroy manufacturing
jobs at home and steep hikes in the cost of living.” The U.S. also would lose a
key partner and Beijing would become the dominant power in the region, they
wrote.
On Monday, Trump likened a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan to
Russia’s war on Ukraine, which he has repeatedly argued wouldn’t have happened
if he had been president.
“If you have the right president, I don’t think it’ll happen,” Trump said
of Taiwan. “I think we’ll be fine.”
The letter was signed by Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the top
Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and fellow Democrats Chris
Coons of Delaware, Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, Andy Kim of New Jersey, Jacky
Rosen of Nevada and Elissa Slotkin of Michigan.
Two Republican senators — Thom Tillis of North Carolina and John Curtis
of Utah — also signed the letter. Both have pushed back against the White House
on other issues, with Tillis pressing the administration on its dealings with
the Federal Reserve, and Curtis urging the administration to seek congressional
approval for its
Many of the lawmakers had recently visited Taiwan and are aware of the
risk of a Chinese invasion and the importance of U.S. support, they wrote.
https://nationalpost.com/news/world/donald-trump-taiwan-china-summit
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