U.S. Speaker meets Taiwan leader and stresses need to speed up arms
deliveries
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[April 06, 2023]
By Michael Martina and David Brunnstrom
SIMI VALLEY, California (Reuters) - U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy
hosted Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen in California on Wednesday,
becoming the most senior U.S. figure to meet a Taiwanese leader on U.S.
soil in decades and stressed the need to accelerate arms deliveries to
Taiwan in the face of rising threats from China.
McCarthy - the third highest ranking official in the U.S. leadership
hierarchy - and other Republican and Democratic lawmakers met Tsai at
the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California
despite threats of retaliation from China, which claims self-ruled
Taiwan as its own.
A China foreign ministry spokesperson quickly denounced the meeting,
accusing the United States of colluding with separatists seeking "Taiwan
independence" and saying that it has been breaching its commitments over
the island.
China considers Taiwan as a breakaway province and has vowed to bring
the island under its control by force if necessary.
Maritime authorities in China's Fujian province launched a three-day
special patrol and inspection operation in the Taiwan Strait that
includes moves to board ships. Taiwan said it had lodged a strong
protest with China about the move.
Tsai thanked the U.S. Congress for standing by Taiwan when democracy was
under threat and cited former U.S. President Reagan saying that "to
preserve peace, we must be strong."
The meeting came at a time of deteriorating U.S.-Chinese relations - the
worst since the countries established diplomatic relations in 1979,
according to many analysts.
Concerns are rising among Western officials that China, which staged war
games around the island last August following a visit by then-House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, could attempt to take Taiwan by force in the
coming years.
On Wednesday, Taiwan's defense ministry said a Chinese aircraft carrier
group was in the waters off the island's southeast coast ahead of the
meeting between Tsai and McCarthy.
ARMS SALES
While Washington has no official relations with Taiwan, it is bound by
law to provide the island with the means to defend itself and has
stepped up interactions with Taipei in recent years as Beijing's
pressure on the island has increased.
Standing with Tsai in front of a blue-and-white Boeing aircraft that
Reagan flew on as president in the 1980s, McCarthy called the friendship
between the people of Taiwan and America "a matter of profound
importance to the free world."
Speaking at a later news conference alongside Republican and Democratic
lawmakers who took part in the meeting with Tsai, McCarthy said they had
discussed how to speed up weapons deliveries to Taiwan.
"We must continue the arms sales to Taiwan and make sure such sales
reach Taiwan on a very timely basis," he said, adding that he believed
there was bipartisan agreement on this. "Second, we must strengthen our
economic cooperation, particularly with trade and technology."
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Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen meets
the U.S. Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy at the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, U.S., April 5,
2023. REUTERS/David Swanson
Mike Gallagher, Republican chairman of the House Select Committee on
the Chinese Communist Party, said after the meeting he would like to
look for ways get Harpoon anti-ship missiles to Taiwan ahead of
those scheduled to go to Saudi Arabia.
U.S. officials say weapons such as the Harpoon missile are far more
important for Taiwan's defense than the heavy weaponry, including
tanks and aircraft, that the island's military has traditionally
purchased from the United States.
At a news conference in Brussels, U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken said there was nothing new in Tsai's transits and such stops
were "private" and "unofficial."
"Beijing should not use the transit as an excuse to take any actions
to ratchet up tensions, to further push it changing the status quo,"
he said.
Supporters waving Taiwanese flags and pro-Taiwan and Hong Kong
banners chanted "Jiayou Taiwan" - the equivalent of "Go Taiwan" -
outside the Reagan Library. A small plane flew overhead towing a
pro-Beijing banner saying "One China! Taiwan is part of China!"
China repeatedly warned against the meeting between McCarthy and
Tsai, who is on her first U.S. stopover since 2019, although some
analysts expect its reaction to be more moderate than that to
Pelosi's Taipei visit.
February saw the dramatic shooting down of a Chinese spy balloon
that drifted over U.S. territory and Xu Xueyuan, charge d’affaires
at China's Washington embassy, said last week McCarthy meeting Tsai
"could lead to another serious confrontation in the China-U.S.
relationship."
The California meeting was seen as a potentially less provocative
alternative to McCarthy visiting Taiwan, something he has said he
hopes to do.
McCarthy said he had no current plans to go to Taiwan, but this did
not mean he would not, and China could not tell him where he could
go or who he could meet.
China has yet to comment on the carrier group, whose appearance also
coincided with the arrival in Beijing of French President Emmanuel
Macron.
It has sailed its carriers near Taiwan before and at similarly
sensitive times. In March last year, the Shandong sailed through the
Taiwan Strait hours before the Chinese and U.S. presidents were due
to talk.
Tsai transited through New York last week en route to Central
America to visit two of Taiwan's few remaining diplomatic partners,
Guatemala and Belize.
(Reporting by Michael Martina and David Brunnstrom; additional
reporting by Ben Blanchard in Taipei, Simon Lewis in Brussels and
Eric Beech and Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing by Don Durfee,
Lincoln Feast, Mark Heinrich, Chizu Nomiyama, Josie Kao and Sandra
Maler)
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