Whether it was his plan all along or not, Donald Trump is now treating Taiwan as a negotiating piece in his diplomatic skirmish with China.
âI fully understand the âone Chinaâ policy,â the four-decade diplomatic truce between the U.S. and China to recognize democratic Taiwan as part of China, he told Fox News Sunday. âBut I donât know why we have to be bound by a âone Chinaâ policy unless we make a deal with China having to do with other things, including trade.â
Dealmaking is what Trump thinks he does best from a career in real estate; heâs now trying to reshape those skills into a diplomatic policy.
On the Sunday show, Trump again railed against China for devaluing its currency, unfair tariffs for U.S. goods, building military operations in the South China Sea, and failing to reign in North Koreaâs nuclear capabilities.
It appeared the President-elect was listing demands that China needed to meet in order for the U.S. to continue acting as if Taiwan belonged to China.
Publicly, China remained calm over Trumpâs call with Taiwan president Tsai Ing-wen earlier this month, which broke four decades of diplomatic protocol. A U.S. president had never publicly spoken to Taiwanâs leader.
But on Monday, the Chinese state press responded to Trumpâs new statements in terse fashion. A Global Times editorial said China âcould not be bullied,â while another article in English, targeting a foreign readership, said if Trump abandoned the âone Chinaâ policy, âBeijing could offer support, even military assistance to U.S. foes.â
Still, Chinese officials themselves havenât directly responded to Trumpâs threatening stance.
Chinaâs mild reaction may continue, as Chinese analysts have noted that Trump is not reshaping U.S. policy yet in his role as President-elect, and Trumpâs inflammatory demands are being mixed with what China considers more positive news. China has called his choice of ambassador to China, the governor of Iowa Terry Branstad, an âold friend.â
The best negotiations make both sides happy.
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