Washington opens de facto embassy in Taiwan, angering China

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“The United States sending officials to Taiwan under any excuses is in serious violation of the ‘one China’ principle,” Geng Shuang, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, said Tuesday. “It interferes with China’s internal affairs and negatively impacts China-US relations.”

“We urge the US to abide by its pledge to China and correct its mistake to avoid harming China-US relations and peace in the Taiwan Strait.”

The American Institute in Taiwan, as the de facto US embassy in Taipei is called, was officially declared open Tuesday morning, in a ceremony attended by senior US diplomats and Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen.

In an opening address, Assistant US Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs Marie Royce described the sprawling five-story complex, which cost $255 million to build, as much more than mere bricks and mortar.

“AIT’s new home is both a tangible symbol that reflects the strength of our ties, and a state-of-the-art facility that will make possible even greater cooperation for years to come,” she said.

Like most governments of the world, Washington officially sticks to a “one China” policy, acknowledging Taiwan being part of China and maintaining formal diplomatic relations only with Beijing.

The island remains an important American ally in the region, however. Under President Donald Trump, close unofficial ties between the US and Taiwan have grown stronger.

Speaking at the ceremony Tuesday, Taiwan President Tsai underscored those ties.

“As free and open democracies, we have an obligation to work with one another to defend our values and protect our joint interests,” she said. “As long as we stand together, nothing can come between us.”

Despite condemnations from China, the US continues to sell advanced weapons to the island under the Taiwan Relations Act for its self-defense against a much bigger Chinese military.

In the past few months, the Trump administration also angered Beijing by authorizing US manufacturers to sell submarine technology to Taiwan, as well as enacting the Taiwan Travel Act to encourage official visits between the US and the island.

Complicated history

China and Taiwan — officially the People’s Republic of China and the Republic of China, respectively — split in 1949 following the Communist victory on the mainland after a civil war.

The two sides have been governed separately since, though a shared cultural and linguistic heritage largely endures — with Mandarin spoken as the official language in both places.

Although both Beijing and Taipei view the island as part of China, neither government recognizes the legitimacy of the opposing side.

There is a strong pro-independence sentiment within Taiwan’s current ruling party led by Tsai, prompting Beijing to harden its stance and stress its long-standing promise to retake the island by force if necessary.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, the country’s most powerful leader in decades who recently vowed to safeguard “every inch of our great motherland’s territory,” ordered ramped-up military exercises around the island in recent months.

These included live-fire drills, sailing China’s only aircraft carrier through the Taiwan Strait, and dispatching its fighters and bombers for “encirclement patrols.”

With its rapidly rising economic and political might, China has also seen greater success in poaching Taiwan’s fewer than 20 remaining diplomatic allies — mostly small and poor countries in the Pacific and the Caribbean.

Both Burkina Faso and the Dominican Republic switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing last month, infuriating Tsai who accused China of “dollar diplomacy.” Burkina Faso’s switch was particularly hard-hitting, leaving Swaziland as Taiwan’s sole African ally.

“China’s suppression will only make Taiwan’s partnerships in the international community even closer,” Tsai said last month. “We will never give in.”



Source : Nbcnewyork