US, Taiwan to launch formal trade talks in autumn by AFP Staff Writers Washington (AFP) Aug 18, 2022 Taiwan and the United States announced plans on Thursday for trade talks in the early autumn as a senior US diplomat warned Beijing will continue to squeeze the self-ruled democracy it claims as its own. Tensions in the Taiwan Strait have soared to their highest in years after US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taipei, sparking a furious response from Beijing which launched its largest military drills around the island. The negotiations would cover a variety of areas, including agriculture, digital trade, regulatory practices and removing trade barriers, the Office of the US Trade Representative said in a statement. The talks "will deepen our trade and investment relationship, advance mutual trade priorities based on shared values, and promote innovation and inclusive economic growth for our workers and businesses," said Deputy United States Trade Representative Sarah Bianchi. "We welcome this opportunity to deepen economic collaboration between our 2 freedom-loving countries while shaping a new model for trade cooperation in the Indo-Pacific," Taiwan's foreign ministry said in a tweet. Taipei's representative in Washington Hsiao Bi-Khim wrote: "We welcome this announcement, and Taiwan's ready to start!" The United States and Taiwan share a longstanding trade and investment relationship. The island is also a crucial global supplier of some of the most advanced semiconductors, used in everything from mobile phones and laptops to cars and missiles. But Taiwan's largest trading partner by far remains China, which bristled at the announcement and said it "firmly opposes this". "China has always opposed any official exchanges between any country and the Taiwan region of China," Beijing's commerce ministry spokeswoman Shu Jueting told reporters on Thursday, adding that the matter concerned China-US relations. Beijing views Taiwan as its own territory to be seized one day, by force if necessary, and last year 42 percent of Taiwan's exports went to China and Hong Kong compared with 15 percent for the United States. Washington diplomatically recognises Beijing over Taipei, but maintains de facto relations with Taiwan and supports the island's right to decide its future. - 'Intimidate and coerce' - The United States has said its position on Taiwan remains unchanged and has accused China of threatening peace in the Taiwan Strait and using the visit by Pelosi as a pretext for military exercises. Its top envoy in East Asia on Thursday said Beijing will likely ramp up pressure on Taiwan in the coming months after the drills. "While our policy has not changed, what has changed is Beijing's growing coercion," Daniel Kritenbrink, assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, told reporters on a teleconference call. "These actions are part of an intensified pressure campaign... to intimidate and coerce Taiwan and undermine its resilience," he said. The envoy said Washington would respond to China's aggression with "calm, but resolute steps" to keep the Taiwan Strait open and peaceful. His comments come after a top US naval commander said this week that Washington and its allies must contest China's ballistic missile fire over Taiwan, which he called a "gorilla in the room". China's exercises included firing multiple ballistic missiles into waters off Taiwan -- some of the world's busiest shipping routes -- which was the first time China has taken such a step since the mid-1990s. Taiwan has staged its own drills simulating a defence against invasion and on Wednesday displayed its most advanced fighter jet in a rare nighttime demonstration in the wake of China's moves around the island. "In the face of the threat from Chinese communist forces' recent military exercises, we have stayed vigilant while establishing the concept of 'battlefields everywhere and training anytime'... to ensure national security," Taiwan's air force said in a statement.
'No use worrying': Taiwanese tourists carry on despite China threat Kinmen, Taiwan (AFP) Aug 16, 2022 Visiting Taiwan's tiny Kinmen Islands last week, Joseph Lin practised standing up on his paddleboard, drifting across from the Chinese city of Xiamen, where days earlier fighter jets had screamed overhead. The Taiwanese islets, just two miles from China's coast, have become a popular tourist destination, and Beijing's massive military drills this month failed to deter domestic visitors from jetting closer to their sabre-rattling neighbour. Lin, a former soldier from southern Taiwan's Pingtung c ... read more
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