Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Taiwanese president travels in face of increased pressure

- By Gerry Shih

BEIJING — When Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen departs Sunday for Latin America, she’ll be traveling to a region she’s already visited three times in two years.

She doesn’t have many other options.

As Tsai crosses the halfway mark of her first four-year term, an eightday swing through Paraguay and Belize is a reflection of how Taiwan’s diplomatic isolation has worsened in the midst of a suffocatin­g Chinese pressure campaign. Just 18 countries — mostly clustered in Latin America, the South Pacific and Caribbean — still maintain formal ties with the self-ruling island, down from 22 when Tsai entered office in 2016.

Along with luring away Taiwan’s allies, China, which considers the island its territory, has frozen contacts with Taipei and sought to constrict its contact with internatio­nal organizati­ons.

It’s also bringing increasing economic pressure and most recently has browbeat internatio­nal airlines and businesses into referring to Taiwan as part of China, a move condemned by Taipei and its ally, the United States.

Still, maintainin­g even a reduced pool of diplomatic allies is important to maintainin­g Taiwan’s image of itself as a sovereign democracy, and affords its leadership with the occasion to assert their presence abroad. Tsai also will be transiting in Los Angeles and Houston, providing opportunit­ies to meet with overseas Taiwanese civic leaders and American officials.

Although Tsai leads Taiwan’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party, which favors declaring formal independen­ce from China, she has pursued a moderate China policy since taking office. But that hasn’t appeased Beijing, which has demanded that Tsai explicitly acknowledg­e an informal 1992 agreement that recognizes Taiwan as a part of China.

As a result, Beijing has “gradually rolled out punitive measures across the entire spectrum of activity and interactio­ns,” said Jonathan Sullivan, director of China Programs at the University of Nottingham. “Going after allies is high profile and rich in symbolism.”

Faced with Beijing’s diplomatic onslaught, Tsai has prioritize­d cementing its ties with remaining allies and backers like the United States and Japan, with which it maintains close relations in the absence of formal diplomatic ties.

At the same time, she’s facing a dip in her domestic poll numbers, possibly, Sullivan said, due to a combinatio­n of Chinese pressure in the internatio­nal arena and disappoint­ment in her reform agenda at home.

On her trip this week, Tsai will attend the inaugurati­on of Paraguayan President-elect Mario Abdo Benitez and address the National Assembly in Belize.

The Dominican Republic ditched Taiwan in May after it refused to match a multibilli­on-dollar aid package offered by China. Flavio Dario Espinal, an adviser to the Dominican presidenti­al office, told reporters in May that “socioecono­mics reality now force us to change course” and embrace China, its $2 billion-a-year trading partner.

“The Chinese government has long respected the strategic thinking of the U.S. and we have shown restraint in the Americas,” Zhu said. “But these countries feel it’s in their national interest to flip to China, whose economic clout and attractive­ness is on a whole different level compared to Taiwan’s.”

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Tsai Ing-wen

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