Taiwan needs to beef up defence, seek more friends, minister says
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[October 27, 2021]
By Robert Muller and Yimou Lee
PRAGUE/TAIPEI (Reuters) - Self-ruled Taiwan
needs to strengthen its defences and, with just 15 diplomatic allies in
the world, seek more friends on the international stage as it faces
pressure from China, Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said on Wednesday.
Tensions between Taiwan and China, which claims the fiercely democratic
island as sovereign territory, have escalated in recent weeks as Beijing
raises military and political pressure.
That has included repeated missions by Chinese warplanes in Taiwan's air
defence identification zone, or ADIZ, which covers a broader area than
Taiwan's territorial air space which Taiwan monitors and patrols to give
it more time to respond to any threats.
China has never renounced the use of force to ensure eventual
unification with Taiwan.
"The situation (in the strait) is growing tense and seems to be growing
more dangerous," Wu told reporters after meeting the Czech Republic's
second-highest ranking official, Senate speaker Milos Vystrcil, in
Prague.
"There are several things we have been doing and are trying to do again
and again. First is to beef up our defence capabilities. We think
weakness is inviting aggression, and therefore we want to have the
ability to defend ourselves, we are determined to defend ourselves," Wu
said.
The second thing was to add friends among the world's countries, Wu
said, so that Taiwan is not alone.
Beijing's position is that the island of 23.5 million people is part of
"one China" and has no right to recognition as a separate country. Only
15 countries in the world, most of them very small, recognise Taiwan.
Wu's comments came shortly after Taiwan's Ministry of Defence said that
although the country did not seek any "arms race" with Beijing, the
island would not bow to pressure.
In its report to parliament, the ministry described the situation in the
Taiwan Strait that separates it from its giant neighbour as "severe and
unstable" and labelled the actions of China's military "provocation".
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Soldiers march to position during an anti-invasion drill on the
beach during the annual Han Kuang military drill in Tainan, Taiwan,
September 14, 2021. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo
"Taiwan will not engage in an arms race with the
Chinese Communists' military and will not seek military
confrontation, hoping for peaceful coexistence across the strait,"
it said.
"But in the face of the Chinese Communists' threat to our national
security, we will do our best to defend our country's sovereignty
and will never give in under duress."
Foreign Minister Wu spoke during his trip to the Czech Republic and
Slovakia which overlapped with a Taiwan trade delegation's visit to
the two countries and Lithuania.
China's embassy in the Czech Republic condemned the Prague visit.
"The Czech Senate and other institutions and some politicians,
despite China's strong stance, insisted on allowing the visit... and
gave platform for separatist activities. China condemns this
strongly and will make legitimate and necessary steps," the embassy
said.
Wu arrived to the Czech capital on invitation from Vystrcil to
honour the assistance that Taiwan gave the Czechs during the
COVID-19 pandemic and also as the EU and NATO member country is
opening more to cooperation with Taipei.
(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard and Gabriel Crossley; Editing
by Nick Macfie)
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