San Francisco Chronicle

Taipei cuts ties with Central American nation

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TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan broke off diplomatic ties with El Salvador on Tuesday as the Central American country defected to rival Beijing in the latest blow to the self-ruled island China has been trying to isolate on the global stage.

The break in ties means Taiwan is recognized as a sovereign nation by only 17 mainly small, developing countries. In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi announced that his government had establishe­d ties with El Salvador.

“History will prove that establishi­ng diplomatic relations with China is in full accordance with the fundamenta­l and long-term interests of the country and the people of El Salvador,” Wang said.

Taiwan split from mainland China amid civil war in 1949, and Beijing, which considers Taiwan its territory, campaigns relentless­ly to isolate the island globally. It cut off relations with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen’s government shortly after she took office in 2016 and has been steadily ratcheting up both diplomatic and economic pressure.

Earlier this year, the West African nation of Burkina Faso and the Dominican Republic broke ties with Taiwan and resumed or establishe­d diplomatic relations with China.

Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu on Tuesday condemned what he called China’s campaign of luring away Taiwan’s allies with promises of vast financial aid and investment.

Taiwan is willing to consider cooperatin­g with its allies in education, farming or even infrastruc­ture initiative­s, Wu said, but refuses to compete with China in buying diplomatic support.

Wu said that El Salvador had repeatedly sought large amounts of funding from Taiwan for a port project that a Taiwanese team of engineers dispatched by the government thought wasn’t economical­ly feasible.

“We think this is an inappropri­ate developmen­t plan that risks causing both countries to fall into great debt,” Wu said, noting that some developing countries were increasing­ly concerned about the risks of unsustaina­ble debt linked to Chinese investment­s.

Wu said El Salvador’s ruling party was also expecting Taiwan to provide funds to help it win in elections, but Taiwan refused.

Some analysts say Chinese President Xi Jinping, one of the most powerful Chinese leaders in decades, seems determined to bring Taiwan under Beijing’s control during his time in office, which would place him in the history books alongside Mao Zedong.

The island’s 23 million residents are strongly in favor of maintainin­g their de facto independen­t status, but Xi has previously warned a Taiwanese envoy that the issue of unificatio­n cannot be put off indefinite­ly.

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