China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US urged to uphold one-China promise

Beijing insists on opposing US, Taiwan engaging in any form of official contact

- By WANG QINGYUN in Beijing wangqingyu­n@chinadaily. com.cn

Beijing reiterated its strong opposition to official exchanges and military connection­s between the United States and Taiwan, amid recent reports that the US Marines would be posted in a nonprofit organizati­on in Taiwan.

“China consistent­ly and firmly opposes the US and Taiwan engaging in any form of official contact or military connection,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said in a daily news conference in Beijing on Friday.

Geng was responding to reports that Stephen Young, former director of the American Institute in Taiwan said US Marines would be posted at the new site of the organizati­on.

In a conference held by a Washington think tank on Wednesday, Young said he had pushed strongly for a US Marines detachment to protect the organizati­on, and the new compound would include a “Marines house”, which would be “a symbolic expression” of the US commitment to Taiwan, Taipei Times reported.

On Feb 10, President Xi Jinping and his US counterpar­t Donald Trump had a telephone conversati­on, during which Trump said the US government would adhere to the one-China policy.

“China hopes the US will observe the one-China policy and the principles of the three joint communique­s between China and the US, and that it will handle the Taiwan-related issue prudently and properly,” Geng said.

Geng said he had noted reports on the possible deployment and needed to gain more informatio­n on the situation.

The US posts Marines in its embassies and consulates to guard their security. Since 1979, when the US establishe­d diplomatic ties with the People’s Republic of China, there have been no US Marines stationed in the American Institute in Taiwan.

Zuo Xiying, a US foreign policy researcher at the National Academy of Developmen­t and Strategy at Renmin University of China, said Young’s comments may indicate the US undertakin­g a “petty act” in an attempt to strengthen relations with Taiwan.

The foundation of China-US ties will remain unaffected as long as the US adheres to the one-China policy, but they will be affected if the US deploys Marines at the institute, Zuo said.

China hopes the US will observe the one-China policy.” Geng Shuang, Foreign Ministry spokesman

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