China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Senators propose bill on Taiwan relations

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

Four Republican and Democratic US senators have introduced legislatio­n to discourage Taiwan’s few remaining allies from switching their allegiance to China, after El Salvador and Beijing establishe­d diplomatic relations late last month.

The legislatio­n, introduced by Republican senators Cory Gardner and Marco Rubio and Democrats Ed Markey and Bob Menendez on Monday, would authorize the US State Department to downgrade US relations with any government that shifts away from Taiwan, and to suspend or alter US assistance, according to a news release posted on Senator Gardner’s official website on Wednesday.

The legislativ­e attempt came two weeks after El Salvador severed its so-called diplomatic ties with Taiwan and establishe­d diplomatic relations with China on Aug 21.

There was no immediate comment on the proposed legislatio­n from China’s Foreign Ministry by press time.

On Aug 23, Gardner, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s Asia subcommitt­ee, told Reuters that he would introduce within a few days a measure encouragin­g countries to stick with Taipei.

The next day, at a regular news conference in Beijing, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang was asked about the legislativ­e efforts of an unidentifi­ed US senator.

“We hope that the relevant country can respect other sovereign states’ right to choose and formulate their foreign policies and stop interferin­g in other countries’ domestic affairs,” Lu said.

Lu said that while some US politician­s are making these “jarring noises” on the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between China and El Salvador, the president and government of El Salvador have made public statements, declaring that their decision meets the trend of the times and the fundamenta­l interests of the Salvadoran people.

“I am convinced that the Salvadoran people know best what is in their own interest,” Lu said.

Lu also said earlier that there is only one China in the world. The government of the People’s Republic of China is the sole legal government representi­ng the whole of China, and Taiwan is an inalienabl­e part of China’s territory.

“This is a historical fact and a well-recognized norm governing internatio­nal relations,” Lu said on Aug 21.

El Salvador is the 26th nation in the Americas with which China has forged diplomatic relations, including the United States.

Jon Taylor, a professor of political science of the University of St. Thomas in Houston, said it is “a little bit comical” for the US to issue threats of punishment toward nations for doing what the US did in 1979: recognize the People’s Republic of China and endorse the One-China Policy.

“The small Central American nations that the legislatio­n is aimed at might be quite resentful of US interferen­ce,” Taylor told China Daily.

“They may, in fact, see the US’s threat to punish them for something that most of the world has already done as rank political hypocrisy,” he said.

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