Montreal Gazette

Taiwan's trade deal applicatio­n sets up showdown with China

- SAMSON ELLIS and CINDY WANG Bloomberg

Taiwan's request to join the Asian-pacific's biggest working trade deal, coming just days after China submitted its own bid, presents the member nations with a difficult choice — admit one, both or neither?

Both Beijing and Taipei have asked to join the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-pacific Partnershi­p in the past week. That creates the possibilit­y of a long and politicize­d applicatio­n process, with the members divided between democracie­s such as Japan, Australia and Canada pushing for Taiwan's accession, and Southeast Asian nations keen to remain in China's good graces, making them vulnerable to pressure from Beijing to thwart Taipei's bid.

“China always obstructs Taiwan's room to manoeuvre on the internatio­nal stage. This is something everyone's aware of,” Taiwan's chief trade negotiator John Deng said at a briefing Thursday. “So if China is able to join first, it's clear that Taiwan's applicatio­n will be at risk.”

The original goal of the US$13.5 trillion trade agreement was to create a western-led alliance to counterbal­ance China's economic might in the Pacific region. While it was initially spearheade­d by the U.S., Japan assumed a key role in reviving the plan after former president Donald Trump withdrew in 2017.

CPTPP member countries account for over 24 per cent of Taiwan's internatio­nal trade, according to a cabinet statement Thursday.

It will be a challenge for Taiwan to reach the required consensus among all 11 nations for its applicatio­n to succeed, according to Drew Thompson, a former U.S. defence official who is now a visiting senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.

“They will need to develop a smart strategy that reflects both their own domestic politics as well as the interests of key CPTPP members,” he said. “Taiwan will have to satisfy many constituen­cies, but it might make sense to start with one big player, such as Japan, and work bilaterall­y to achieve Tokyo's overt support, leveraging that support to convince other members to constructi­vely engage Taipei.”

Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen urged Japan to support her government's efforts to join the deal in a tweet in Japanese Thursday.

Japan welcomed Taiwan's bid and would respond “based on a strategic point of view and with the public's understand­ing,” Foreign Minister Motegi Toshimitsu said Thursday in New York, according to a Kyodo News report. That contrasts with his statements about China's applicatio­n last week, when he said that Japan would have to look properly at whether China was “ready to reach the high level of TPP.”

Joining the group would be seen as a major political coup for Tsai, who's government views Taiwan as a de facto sovereign nation awaiting broader internatio­nal recognitio­n. China claims the island as part of its territory and vehemently opposes any moves that imply separate statehood for Taiwan.

Taiwan and China already peacefully coexist as members of the same trade organizati­on as both are part of the World Trade Organizati­on, although Taiwan is a member as “the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu.” Eager to eliminate as many political barriers as possible, Taiwan's government used the same designatio­n in its applicatio­n to join the CPTPP.

China's Taiwan Affairs Office laid out its stance on a possible Taiwanese applicatio­n earlier this month, saying in a statement on Sept. 8 that Taiwan must adhere to Beijing's “one-china principle” and any other countries must avoid implying Taiwan is a sovereign country in their dealings with Taipei.

That likely means that China needs to join before Taiwan, and the official title of Taiwan can't be the “Republic of China,” according to Henry Gao, associate professor of law at Singapore Management University.

Jeremy Huai-che Chiang, a former researcher at the Taiwan-asia Exchange Foundation focusing on Southeast Asian relations, sees countries in the region as unlikely to upset China over Taiwan due to Beijing's economic weight and past record of punitive measures.

 ?? JEROME FAVRE/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Container ships sit docked in the Port of Keelung in Taiwan. The island has applied to join the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-pacific Partnershi­p.
JEROME FAVRE/BLOOMBERG FILES Container ships sit docked in the Port of Keelung in Taiwan. The island has applied to join the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-pacific Partnershi­p.
 ?? ?? Tsai Ing-wen
Tsai Ing-wen

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