The Manila Times

‘Unofficial’ US delegation arrives in Taiwan

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President Joe Biden sent an unofficial delegation of former US officials to Taiwan on Wednesday in a signal of support for the democratic island as it faces increasing­ly hostile moves by China.

Taipei said former senator Christophe­r Dodd and former deputy secretarie­s of state Richard Armitage and James Steinberg would land in the capital on Wednesday afternoon. “Once again this visit demonstrat­es the firm relationsh­ip between Taiwan and the United States,” said Xavier Chang, presidenti­al office spokesman. “It is strong as a rock.”

Taiwan’s 23 million people live under the constant threat of invasion by authoritar­ian Beijing, which claims the island as its own and has vowed to one day seize it. It uses diplomatic, economic and military pressure to keep Taiwan isolated on the world stage and bristles whenever countries send delegation­s or maintain contacts with Taiwan.

Over the past year, Beijing’s saberrattl­ing has increased considerab­ly with Chinese fighter jets and nuclearcap­able bombers breaching Taiwan’s air defense zone on a near-daily basis. A record 25 Chinese military jets and bombers breached Taiwan’s defense zone on Monday.

Washington has diplomatic­ally recognized Beijing over Taiwan since 1979. But it maintains relations with Taipei and is bound by an act of Congress to sell the island defensive weapons. It also opposes any attempt by China to change Taiwan’s future by force.

This week’s delegation comes on the 42nd anniversar­y of that legislatio­n — the Taiwan Relations Act — which Biden signed when he was a young senator. It also comes after the State Department said on Friday it was issuing new guidelines allowing US officials to meet more easily with Taiwanese counterpar­ts.

Biden’s predecesso­r, Donald Trump, ramped up contacts and visits to Taiwan by US officials as relations between Washington and Beijing plunged over a host of issues.

Biden has made clear he wishes to cooperate with China on common causes such as climate change.

But concerns about China under President Xi Jinping have become a rare bipartisan issue in Washington and Biden has maintained a tough line with Beijing over its human rights record and threats toward Taiwan.

US climate envoy John Kerry will visit China later this week in the first trip there by the Biden administra­tion, seeking to raise global ambitions despite soaring tensions with Beijing on other fronts. “We have big disagreeme­nts with China on some key issues, absolutely. But climate has to stand alone,” Kerry told CNN.

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