Taipei Times

Envoy invited to Kishida’s US Congress speech

‘READY TO CONTRIBUTE’: US Ambassador to Canada David Cohen affirmed Taiwan’s achievemen­ts in combatting disinforma­tion at an event in Ottawa

- BY SU YUNG-YAO AND WU CHE-YU STAFF REPORTERS

Representa­tive to the US Alexander Yui (俞大㵢) was invited by US Representa­tive Michael McCaul, chairman of the US House of Representa­tives Committee on Foreign Affairs, to listen to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s address to the US Congress on Friday, the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representa­tive Office (TECRO) in Washington said.

Before Kishida’s address, Yui visited McCaul and discussed how to promote Taiwan-US cooperatio­n in several fields, TECRO said.

“A pleasure to meet with Ambassador Yui of Taiwan, my guest to @JPN_PMO’s [Kishida] address to Congress today. We discussed additional ways in which the U.S. can support our partner Taiwan and promote greater cooperatio­n and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific,” McCaul wrote on X.

Yui responded on X, saying: “Thank you Chairman @RepMcCaul for the kind invitation. I look forward to continue working with you to promote our shared values and common interests in the IndoPacifi­c region.”

Kishida’s address at a joint meeting of the US Congress on Friday was titled “For the Future: Our Global Partnershi­p.”

“As the geopolitic­al landscape changed and as Japan grew in confidence, we expanded our outlook beyond that of being America’s closest ally. We first became a regional partner of the United States, and now we have become your global partner,” Kishida said.

He said freedom and democracy are under threat around the globe.

“China’s current external stance and military actions present an unpreceden­ted and the greatest strategic challenge, not only to the peace and security of Japan but to the peace and stability of the internatio­nal community at large.”

“Ukraine of today may be East Asia of tomorrow,” he added.

In other news, the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Canada, the US embassy in Ottawa and the University of Ottawa’s Informatio­n Integrity Lab on Friday held a Global Cooperatio­n and Training Framework event titled “Building Democratic Resiliency Against Disinforma­tion: Elections in Taiwan and Beyond” in the capital of Canada.

Opening remarks were given by Representa­tive to Canada Harry Tseng (曾厚仁), US Ambassador to Canada David Cohen and Australian High Commission­er to Canada Scott Ryan.

Tseng said that Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy includes countering disinforma­tion as a core issue, and facing complicate­d cognitive warfare tactics, Taiwan is ready to contribute to defending freedom and democracy with its democratic allies.

Cohen affirmed Taiwan’s achievemen­ts in countering disinforma­tion, and quoted US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who once said that “Taiwan is a powerful affirmatio­n of democracy.”

The US is committed to maintainin­g cross-strait peace and stability and the peaceful resolution of difference­s without coercion and pressure, Cohen said, adding that Taiwan-US partnershi­p is based on shared democratic values.

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