China has called on the US to “correct its mistake” after Donald Trump approved rules allowing top-level US officials to travel to Taiwan to meet their Taipei counterparts.
US representatives can already travel to democratic Taiwan and Taiwanese officials occasionally visit the White House, but meetings are usually low profile to avoid offending China.
The Taiwan Travel Act, which the president signed on Friday following its passage through Congress, encourages visits between US and Taiwanese officials “at all levels”.
Washington cut formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 1979 in favour of Beijing under the “one China” policy. But it maintains trade relations with the island and sells it weapons [1], angering China.
China regards Taiwan as a renegade province and has long stated its desire for reunification.
The Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said the bill’s clauses, while not legally binding, “severely violate” the “one China” principle and send “very wrong signals to the ‘pro-independence’ separatist forces in Taiwan”.
“China is strongly opposed to that,” Lu said in a statement on Saturday. “We urge the US side to correct its mistake, stop pursuing any official ties with Taiwan or improving its current relations with Taiwan in any substantive way,” he said.
In a separate statement, the Chinese defence ministry spokesman Wu Qian said the act “interferes in China’s internal affairs”.
China urges the US to “stop pursuing any US-Taiwan military ties and stop arms sales to Taiwan, so as to avoid causing serious damage to the bilateral and military relations between China and the US, and to the peace and stability in the Taiwan strait”, the statement said.
The new law describes Taiwan as “a beacon of democracy” in Asia, and states that “Taiwan’s democratic achievements inspire many countries and people in the region”.
Trump’s signature, announced late on Friday – when the White House usually tries to bury news – comes amid increasing tensions between the mainland and the self-ruled island.
Beijing has cut off official communications with Taipei because its president, Tsai Ing-wen, refuses to acknowledge the democratic island as part of “one China”.
The travel act also comes amid trade tensions between the US and China as Trump considers fresh measures that have raised fears of a tit-for-tat trade war.
Agence France-Presse