Trump keeps the door open to a call with Taiwan's president even though China has warned against it
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Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (AP) â President Donald Trump on Friday indicated that he may still speak with Taiwanâs President Lai Ching-te â even after China has publicly urged him not to directly engage with the leader of the self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its own. Trump first raised the idea last month on his way back from meeting President Xi Jinping in Beijing, saying that he intended to speak directly with Lai as he weighs whether to go ahead with a $14 billion arms sale for Taipei that Congress approved earlier this year. The U.S. president on Friday suggested that a call with the Taiwanese leader is still in play. âIâll always talk to him,â Trump told reporters when asked if he still intended on calling Lai. Such a call would mark the first direct dialogue between sitting American and Taiwanese presidents in many decades, and Beijing has discouraged Trump against such an engagement. The Chinese embassy in Washington in a statement to the Associated Press this week said that kind of phone call could undermine progress in the delicate U.S.-China relationship and urged the Republican administration to âhandle the Taiwan question with utmost prudenceâ and âavoid sending wrong signalsâ to officials in the democratically run island that China views as a breakaway province. It would be an unprecedented phone call Trump raised Chinaâs ire when he took a congratulatory call from Taiwanâs then-President Tsai Ing-wen after winning the 2016 presidential election but before taking office.
Trump has raised the idea of a direct engagement with Lai even as heâs been more circumspect about whether heâll move forward with a major arms package for Taiwan after hearing concerns about it from Xi in Beijing. Congress greenlit the arms deal in January but it still needs Trumpâs approval, The president said last month he sees arms sales with Taiwan as a ânegotiating chipâ in the administrationâs approach to Pacific policy. At last monthâs Beijing summit, Xi warned Trump that the âTaiwan questionâ is the most important issue in ties between China and the U.S., and that the two nations will âhave clashes and even conflictsâ without proper handling of the matter, according to Chinese officials. Read More Trump had an unusual consultation on Taiwan during his Beijing visit Trumpâs discussion with Xi about the arms sales to Taiwan seemed out of step with the U.S. policy principles known as the Six Assurances. The nonbinding principles, formulated in 1982 under President Ronald Reagan, have helped guide the U.S. relationship with Taipei, according to analysts. The second of the Six Assurances states that the U.S. âdid not agree to consult with the Peopleâs Republic of China on arms sales to Taiwan.â Secretary of State Marco Rubio during a series of congressional hearings earlier this week said that the United Statesâ Taiwan policy has not changed. But Trumpâs rhetoric has added a more foggy dynamic to the U.S.-Taiwan relationship, said Craig Singleton, a China expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. âTrumpâs comments about Taiwan arms sales as a negotiating chip, combined with uncertainty around a possible Lai call, have created more ambiguity than Taipei would like,â Singleton said.
