The US will continue its friendly approach toward Taiwan in the next US administration and Taiwan would work to prevent China “making trouble” during the transition, a senior Taiwanese security official said yesterday.
Former US president Donald Trump, the Republican candidate who claimed victory in Tuesday’s vote against US Vice President Kamala Harris of the Democratic Party, made comments on the campaign trail that Taiwan should pay to be protected and also accused the nation of “stealing” American semiconductor business.
Taiwan has faced military pressure from Beijing over the past five years, including four major rounds of war games in the past two years.
Photo: CNA
National Security Bureau Director-General Tsai Ming-yen (蔡明彥) spoke to reporters at the legislature in Taipei ahead of the announcement of Trump’s win early yesterday morning.
“On relations across the Taiwan Strait, we believe that the United States will continue its current approach of constraining China and being friendly to Taiwan,” Tsai said.
Taiwan will continue to communicate with the current administration, focusing on key issues for cooperation “in the next phase,” and work with international partners to exchange information on China’s intentions and military movements during the transition, he said.
“This is as to prevent the Chinese communists from taking advantage of the transition of the US government and to prevent them from making trouble during the transition,” he said.
Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) said that the government was paying great attention to the election and making preparations no matter who won.
However, Taiwan-US economic ties are deep and would not be easy to change, and the effect on the economy would be small irrespective of who the next president is, Kuo said.
The Office of Trade Negotiations said that Taiwan and the US have channels of communication on trade issues that have long been in place, adding that it hopes that both sides would continue to have constructive dialogue, and foster deeper economic and trade relations.
The US-Taiwan 21st Century Trade Initiative was launched in June 2022, with the first batch of agreements signed in June last year on customs and border procedures, regulatory practices and small businesses.
The latest round of talks on the second batch of agreements began in May. Taiwan is still working to have the five agreements take effect this year, ahead of the new US president taking office on Jan. 20 next year, a trade official said on condition of anonymity.
The official also expressed hope that talks on the second round of agreements on agricultural, labor and environmental issues would continue as planned, as well as the third round on standards, state-owned enterprises, nonmarket policies and digital trade.
Later, at about 4pm when the US election result looked settled, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫) congratulated Trump on Facebook, saying that the party has long enjoyed close ties with both major parties in the US.
The KMT hopes for a more robust relationship between Taiwan and the US, and believes a closer relationship is possible under Trump’s experienced leadership, Chu wrote.
Chu said that he had asked party members to reach out to key political figures in the US later this week, especially those who are likely to fill key positions in the new administration, to convey the desire of Taiwanese to maintain the “status quo” of peace in the Taiwan Strait.
Trump in his first four-year term from 2017 to 2021 oversaw the passage of many Taiwan-friendly bills and helped the nation bolster its self-defense, Chu said, adding that the KMT expects him to continue his efforts to mediate geopolitical conflicts.
The Taiwan People’s Party in a statement congratulated Trump, while also conveying its “highest regards” for the Democratic ticket, US Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
Taiwan and the US have a solid partnership, the TPP said, adding that it looks forward to continuing to promote bilateral economic development, and safeguarding peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region under Trump’s leadership.
Additional reporting by Chung Li-hua, Shih Hsiao-kuang, Lin Che-yuan and Kayleigh Madjar
MISINFORMATION: The generated content tends to adopt China’s official stance, such as ‘Taiwan is currently governed by the Chinese central government,’ the NSB said Five China-developed artificial intelligence (AI) language models exhibit cybersecurity risks and content biases, an inspection conducted by the National Security Bureau (NSB) showed. The five AI tools are: DeepSeek, Doubao (豆包), Yiyan (文心一言), Tongyi (通義千問) and Yuanbao (騰訊元寶), the bureau said, advising people to remain vigilant to protect personal data privacy and corporate business secrets. The NSB said it, in accordance with the National Intelligence Services Act (國家情報工作法), has reviewed international cybersecurity reports and intelligence, and coordinated with the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau and the National Police Agency’s Criminal Investigation Bureau to conduct an inspection of China-made AI language
LIMITS: While China increases military pressure on Taiwan and expands its use of cognitive warfare, it is unwilling to target tech supply chains, the report said US and Taiwan military officials have warned that the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) could implement a blockade within “a matter of hours” and need only “minimal conversion time” prior to an attack on Taiwan, a report released on Tuesday by the US Senate’s China Economic and Security Review Commission said. “While there is no indication that China is planning an imminent attack, the United States and its allies and partners can no longer assume that a Taiwan contingency is a distant possibility for which they would have ample time to prepare,” it said. The commission made the comments in its annual
‘TROUBLEMAKER’: Most countries believe that it is China — rather than Taiwan — that is undermining regional peace and stability with its coercive tactics, the president said China should restrain itself and refrain from being a troublemaker that sabotages peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday. Lai made the remarks after China Coast Guard vessels sailed into disputed waters off the Senkaku Islands — known as the Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) in Taiwan — following a remark Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi made regarding Taiwan. Takaichi during a parliamentary session on Nov. 7 said that a “Taiwan contingency” involving a Chinese naval blockade could qualify as a “survival-threatening situation” for Japan, and trigger Tokyo’s deployment of its military for defense. Asked about the escalating tensions
DISPUTE: A Chinese official prompted a formal protest from Tokyo by saying that ‘the dirty head that sticks itself out must be cut off,’ after Takaichi’s Taiwan remarks Four armed China Coast Guard vessels yesterday morning sailed through disputed waters controlled by Japan, amid a diplomatic spat following Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s comments on Taiwan. The four ships sailed around the Senkaku Islands — known as the Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) to Taiwan, and which Taiwan and China also claim — on Saturday before entering Japanese waters yesterday and left, the Japan Coast Guard said. The China Coast Guard said in a statement that it carried out a “rights enforcement patrol” through the waters and that it was a lawful operation. As of the end of last month,