Taiwan ‘confident’ in US ties ahead of Trump-Xi meeting

Taiwan ‘confident’ in US ties ahead of Trump-Xi meeting

The US leader has appeared indecisive on his stance toward Taipei since taking office, having yet to approve any new arms sales.

Taiwan
Concerns grow that Donald Trump could trade Taiwan’s interests to China’s Xi Jinping at Thursday’s Apec summit in South Korea. (EPA images pic)
TAIPEI:
Taiwan is “confident” in its relations with the United States, foreign minister Lin Chia-lung said on Thursday, ahead of a meeting between the US and Chinese presidents where the issue of the island Beijing claims as its own could come up.

Since taking office this year, US President Donald Trump has vacillated on his position towards Taiwan while pursuing a trade deal with Beijing. Trump says Chinese President Xi Jinping has told him he will not invade while the Republican president is in office, but Trump has yet to approve any new US arms sales to Taipei.

The fear in Taipei, which has long enjoyed strong unofficial support from Washington, is that the Trump-Xi meeting on Thursday in South Korea on the sidelines of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit could see some sort of “selling out” of Taiwan’s interests by Trump to Xi.

Asked by reporters in Taipei about the meeting and whether Taiwan could come up, Lin said the government was “of course” paying attention to the talks, and that Taiwan and the United States have close cooperation on security and other matters.

“So we have confidence in Taiwan-U.S. relations, and have close communication channels,” he added.

Stay current - Follow FMT on WhatsApp, Google news and Telegram

Subscribe to our newsletter and get news delivered to your mailbox.