US announces highest-level visit to Taiwan in decades, risking China anger

A senior US official is to lead a delegation to Taiwan in the highest-level visit since 1979 to discuss the coronavirus pandemic and “celebrate the shared values” of the two democracies, a move likely to anger China.

The US health secretary, Alex Azar, said he would be the first cabinet member to visit in six years, in the most significant trip there since the US formally cut diplomatic ties decades ago to pursue relations with the Chinese Communist party. Taiwan said the visit would take place in the coming days.

“Taiwan has been a model of transparency and cooperation in global health during the Covid-19 pandemic and long before it,” Azar, who is also the chair of the US coronavirus taskforce, said. “I look forward to conveying President Trump’s support for Taiwan’s global health leadership and underscoring our shared belief that free and democratic societies are the best model for protecting and promoting health.”

<span>Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images</span>
Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

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Azar will also meet president Tsai Ing-wen whose self-governing democracy enjoys international support for its Covid-response, despite China’s efforts to keep it out of the World Health Organization.

The US delegation’s visit is likely to inflame tensions with China, which which claims Taiwan as its own and vows it will be brought under control by force if necessary. In May, Beijing expressed “strong indignation” after the US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, hailed the “courage and vision” of Tsai upon her re-election.

Last year a US visit by Tsai drew “stern representations” from Beijing, which urged Washington not to allow the visit if it wanted “to avoid harming Sino-US relations and peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait”.

While ostensibly focused around the coronavirus pandemic, the visit comes at the lowest point if US-Sino relations in four decades, with hostilities on multiple fronts including trade, technology, human rights and China’s crackdown on Hong Kong.

Taiwan president Tsai Ing-wen will meet Alex Azar.
Taiwan president Tsai Ing-wen will meet Alex Azar. Photograph: David Chang/EPA

Joining Azar will be the chief medical officer of the Centers for Disease Control, Dr Mitch Wolfe, and retired US ambassador James Moriarty, who now chairs the American Institute in Taiwan. They will “discuss the Covid-19 response, global health, the US-Taiwan partnership, and Taiwan’s role as a reliable global supplier of medical equipment and critical technology”.

In a statement likely to draw comparisons with China, the HHS said: “In contrast to authoritarian systems, US and Taiwan societies and economies are uniquely equipped to drive global progress in areas such as medicine and science to help the world tackle emerging threats.”

Taiwan’s virus response is considered to be one of the most successful in the world, while the US continues to report tens of thousands of new cases a day. The US has provided assistance to Taiwan in the form of arms sales, and an increasing presence in the South China Sea.

On Tuesday China’s ambassador to the US, Cui Tiankai, said the US’s intensifying military activities in the region were raising the risk of a potential confrontation, and denied allegations Beijing was practising intimidation in the South China Sea.

Cui, who is seen as a moderate voice among Chinese diplomats and officials, said Beijing did not want tensions to escalate further, after retaliatory consulate closures in Houston and Chengdu, and sanctions against government officials.

“I don’t think a new cold war would serve anybody’s interest,” he said. “Why should we allow history to repeat ... when we are faced with so many new challenges?”

Taiwan’s ministry of foreign affairs said it looked forward to welcoming the delegation. “Taiwan and the US are like-minded partners cooperating closely in combating the coronavirus and promoting freedom, democracy and human rights worldwide,” it said.

Environmental Protection Agency administrator, Gina McCarthy, was the last US cabinet official to visit Taiwan in 2014.

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