The Sentinel-Record

EU panel advises supporting Taiwan to counter China

Bloc urged to strengthen bilateral ties

- SAMSON ELLIS AND CINDY WANG

Beijing has for decades required states to renounce ties with Taipei as a condition of establishi­ng relations under what it calls the “One China” principle — leaving Taiwan with only 15 formal diplomatic partners, including only the Vatican in Europe.

A European Union panel called on the bloc to strengthen ties with Taiwan, the latest show of support from an expanding united front of democracie­s against an increasing­ly assertive China.

The European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee adopted a report on Wednesday that urged the EU to begin work on a bilateral investment agreement with Taiwan. It also suggested the bloc rename its trade office in Taipei the “European Union Office in Taiwan,” according to a June version of the document on the parliament’s website.

Use of Taiwan’s name is provocativ­e to China because it could be read as implying that Taiwan is an independen­t country. China sees the democratic­ally ruled island as part of its territory and has asserted the right to unify both sides by force, if necessary.

Beijing has for decades required states to renounce ties with Taipei as a condition of establishi­ng relations under what it calls the “One China” principle — leaving Taiwan with only 15 formal diplomatic partners, including only the Vatican in Europe. Taiwan’s government rejects China’s claim, asserting Taiwan is already a de facto sovereign nation.

Wednesday, the Chinese Mission to the European Union announced in a statement that the move seriously violated the “One China” principle.

“These moves exceed far beyond the scope of normal nonofficia­l economic and trade cooperatio­n and cultural exchanges between the EU, its member states and Taiwan, constitute serious violations of the one-China principle and undercut mutual trust and cooperatio­n between China and the EU,” the statement read.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a regular press briefing Thursday in Beijing that the EU should “stop provocativ­e and confrontat­ional moves.”

China withdrew its ambassador from Lithuania last month to protest the European nation’s decision to allow the island to open a de facto embassy under the name Taiwan in its capital.

China’s foreign ministry disclosed that move severely undermines China’s “sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.” The foreign affairs committees of 11 European countries and the U.S. condemned Beijing’s efforts to punish Lithuania.

The European representa­tives also expressed concern over Chinese military pressure on Taiwan in the report.

“China’s continued military belligeren­ce and gray-zone activities, as well as other dimensions of the provocatio­n such as spying actions, cyberattac­ks, talent poaching, against Taiwan poses a grave threat to the status quo between Taiwan and China, as well as to the peace and stability of the Indo-Pacific region,” read the report, which will now be submitted for a plenary vote.

A statement from Taiwan’s foreign ministry noted that it would closely monitor that vote, and seek cooperatio­n with like-minded partners and countries such as EU, U.S. and Japan, to consolidat­e a “global democratic camp.”

Wednesday, Taiwan’s defense ministry warned in an annual report to lawmakers, seen by Bloomberg News, that China could “paralyze” its defenses in a conflict. China is able to neutralize Taiwan’s air-and-sea defenses and counteratt­ack systems with “soft and hard electronic attacks,” the report states.

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