TAIPEI/BEIJING, March 7 (Reuters) – Taiwan will not tolerate repeated provocations from China, the island’s defense minister said on Tuesday, while China’s foreign minister said Taiwan was the “first red line” China should not cross. American relations.
Tensions over democratically-ruled Taiwan, which China considers its own territory, have increased Beijing’s diplomatic and military pressure over the past three years to force Taipei to accept Chinese sovereignty.
China held military exercises near Taiwan in August to protest a visit to Taipei by then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen plans to meet with current House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in the US in the coming weeks, two sources told Reuters.
Speaking to reporters in parliament, Taiwanese Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng said he was not aware of a planned meeting between Tsai and McCarthy.
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“The Chinese Communists use any excuse to send in troops,” Chiu said. “But we’re not going to say, ‘Bring it on,’ we’re going to take a calm and rational approach.”
He added that Taiwan’s military is ready to fight, even if it is hoped that this will not happen.
“If the Chinese Communists move again, the job of the armed forces is to fight back,” said Chiu. “We will not allow repeated provocations against us. It is unacceptable.”
Taiwan’s government has not announced Tsai’s visit to the United States, and she has previously made stops en route to countries in Latin America and the Caribbean that maintain formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan.
Taiwan’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday it would announce any overseas trips by the president in due course, but there was nothing to announce at this time. McCarthy also did not confirm the meeting with Tsai.
In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang said it was “ridiculous” for US officials to say Taiwan was not China’s internal matter.
“The Taiwan issue is the core of China’s core interests, the foundation of the political foundation of Sino-US relations and the first red line that should not be crossed in Sino-US relations,” he said at China’s annual summit. Parliamentary Assembly.
“The United States has an irrevocable responsibility for the cause of the Taiwan question.”
China will continue to work for “peaceful reunification” but reserves the right to take all necessary measures, Qin said.
“No one should underestimate the determination and outstanding ability of the Chinese government and people to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
Taiwan’s government fiercely denies China’s territorial claims, although it has repeatedly offered talks with Beijing, and says only the people of Taiwan can decide their future.
A source told Reuters that if the US meeting goes ahead – probably in April – it would not necessarily rule out McCarthy coming to Taiwan in the future.
Four other sources — including U.S. officials and people familiar with the thinking of the U.S. and Taiwanese administrations — said both sides are deeply concerned that McCarthy’s future visit could sharply escalate tensions across the Taiwan Strait as the island prepares. own presidential election early next year.
Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Ryan Wu; Editing by Gerry Doyle and Stephen Coates
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