Vancouver Sun

Canada needs like-minded allies in Asia

Scott Simon outlines why Taiwan is an ideal partner.

- Scott Simon is a professor in the School of Sociologic­al and Anthropolo­gical Studies at the University of Ottawa, and co-holder of the uottawa Research Chair in Taiwan Studies. He is a senior fellow at the Macdonald-laurier Institute.

Canada benefits most from close relationsh­ips with countries that share our values. One such country that engages in fair economic practices, promotes health security, and fosters geopolitic­al stability is Taiwan. However, this proven, reliable, and willing partner remains unrecogniz­ed by Canada as an important ally.

Worse still, Canada's reluctance to turn to Taiwan comes at a time when we need all the partners we can get in the Indo-pacific region. We are facing a persistent challenge from China in the forms of hostage diplomacy, regional aggression, economic coercion, human rights abuses, and more.

With that in mind, it is time to consider Taiwan. There is much that Taiwan has to offer. For instance, Taiwan has done an amazing job of containing COVID-19. Even as cases soar, Taiwan to date has an accumulate­d case count of 618 and only seven deaths. Taiwan, from government and civil society, has donated more than two million masks and other personal protective equipment (PPE) to Canada and stands ready to share its public health expertise.

As we look toward a POST-COVID economic reconstruc­tion, we will need to make careful decisions about which countries to prioritize. Common sense would dictate that our needs are best met in a country with solid property rights, rule of law, and no track record of arbitraril­y detaining Canadians for political purposes. Taiwan meets all those conditions.

Taiwan is a country of 23.6 million people and already Canada's 12th-largest trading partner overall and the fifth-largest in Asia. Unlike China, Taiwan is a vibrant and progressiv­e democracy, sharing many values with Canada. Indeed, it was the first country in Asia to legalize samesex marriage, and Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen made a historic apology to Indigenous peoples in 2016 and establishe­d the Indigenous Historical Justice Committee to promote truth and reconcilia­tion.

Clearly, Taiwan is a ready and willing partner, and Canada has much to gain from co-operation. So, what's the next step?

COVID-19 has not stopped other countries from deepening their relationsh­ips with Taiwan. President of the Czech Senate, Milos Vystrcil, led a delegation to Taiwan in September. Given China's hostile diplomatic tactics to isolate Taiwan, Vystrcil's delegation served as a bold act of solidarity. U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar and State Department Under- Secretary Keith Krach also visited Taiwan.

These leaders know it is important to show up in person. Canada could send a current or former minister or prime minister to discuss pandemic collaborat­ion. We could return to negotiatio­ns for a foreign investment promotion and protection agreement. We stopped those talks in December 2018 when two Canadians were detained in China in retaliatio­n for Canada's arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou. It is not a good sign that we permit Canada-taiwan relations to also be taken hostage.

As we work through a second wave of COVID-19, we must ensure that our fragile PPE supply chains are protected by drawing closer to our friends who produce surplus PPE. Canada should support Taiwan's ascension to the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-pacific Partnershi­p, a move that Canadians broadly support.

Including Taiwan in multilater­al institutio­ns is difficult, because China bullies other countries into accepting Beijing's absurd claims of de jure dominion over the island.

But Taiwan's independen­t existence is a reality, and we need its contributi­ons at the World Health Organizati­on and the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on to rebuild after COVID. Canada already expressed support for Taiwan's meaningful inclusion, despite Chinese opposition. If China deepens its obstructio­n, we can react by investing more in the trade partnershi­p and in bilateral relations with Taiwan. We need to deal with Taiwan on its own merits, which means no longer imagining it as an obstacle to relations with China.

We need new trading partners, strong advocates for the rules-based internatio­nal order, and like-minded allies in our corner to counter China and advance Canada's interests. We also need to work with successful countries if we are going to emulate their success in battling COVID-19. Canada and Taiwan need each other. It's time that our side wakes up to that.

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