China slams Nancy Pelosi’s Taiwan visit as ‘extremely dangerous’

Beijing says US politician is ‘playing with fire’ as she visits Taiwan amid heightened US-China tensions.

Nancy Pelosi being greeted by Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu as she arrives in Taipei, Taiwan.
Nancy Pelosi is on a trip to Taiwan and will meet President Tsai Ing-wen on Wednesday [Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs via EPA]

China has condemned the visit by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan as “extremely dangerous”, warning that the trip was a threat to stability in the region.

Pelosi arrived in Taiwan late on Tuesday on a trip she said demonstrated the United States’s solidarity with the self-governed island, which China claims as its own.

Washington does not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but is bound by US law to provide the island with the means to defend itself.

The US politician explained her reasons for visiting Taiwan in an editorial published in the Washington Post minutes after she arrived on the island.

“We cannot stand by as the CCP (the Chinese Communist Party) proceeds to threaten Taiwan – and democracy itself,” she wrote in the opinion piece.

Pelosi – the highest-ranking US official to travel to Taiwan in 25 years – arrived at Songshan Airport in downtown Taipei on a flight from Malaysia to begin a visit that risks pushing US-Chinese relations to a new low.

Her delegation was greeted by Taiwan’s foreign minister, Joseph Wu, and Sandra Oudkirk, the top US representative in Taiwan.

INTERACTIVE- Nancy Pelosi Taiwan map

‘Playing with fire’

China immediately condemned Pelosi’s visit, with the foreign ministry saying it seriously damages peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.

The visit “has a severe impact on the political foundation of China-U.S. relations, and seriously infringes upon China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity”, it said in a statement.

“These moves, like playing with fire, are extremely dangerous. Those who play with fire will perish by it,” the statement added.

Chinese warplanes buzzed the line dividing the Taiwan Strait before Pelosi’s arrival. The Chinese military has been put on high alert and will launch “targeted military operations” in response to her visit, the defence ministry said.

The People’s Liberation Army Eastern Theatre Command announced that it will conduct joint air and sea drills near Taiwan starting on Tuesday night, and test-launch conventional missiles in the sea east of Taiwan.

Heino Klinck, former US deputy assistant defence secretary, told Al Jazeera that the Chinese military would probably carry out operations in order to send a message to Taiwan and its partners that Beijing is resolute in its opposition to any form of independence or autonomy for Taiwan.

Chinese leaders have “in essence painted themselves into such a public corner on Taiwan that they will have to do something in the short term,” he said.

Yu Jie, a senior research fellow on China at the Chatham House think tank in London, said the Chinese response would probably involve a military stand-off with the US Navy and economic sanctions on Taiwanese agricultural and manufacturing products.

“Despite a chorus of nationalistic rhetoric, China will be careful not to stumble into a conflict with colossal damages on all fronts,” she said. “Beijing cannot afford to be perceived as unilaterally seeking to change what it agreed with the US back in 1979. If that happens, it will provoke the US political establishment to reach a unanimous agreement to change the “One China Policy” in writing. Ahead of the 20th Party congress, the last thing President Xi wants is a useless war to deal with a Congress speaker who only has a few months’ shelf life left.”

Supporting democracy

Pelosi is on a tour of Asia that includes scheduled visits to Singapore, Malaysia, South Korea and Japan. Her stop in Taiwan was unannounced but widely anticipated.

Pelosi said that the visit to Taiwan “in no way contradicts” one-China policy.

“By traveling to Taiwan, we honor our commitment to democracy: reaffirming that the freedoms of Taiwan – and all democracies – must be respected,” Pelosi wrote.

The trip is controversial as it risks triggering a major crisis between China and the US. China had threatened the US that there would be “serious consequences” if Pelosi went ahead with her visit.

Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen will meet Pelosi on Wednesday morning and the two women have lunch together, the presidential office said. Pelosi, travelling with six other American lawmakers, is the first US House speaker to visit Taiwan since 1997.

Pelosi underscored the significance of the trip by making connections between Taiwan and Ukraine, noting that “the world faces a choice between autocracy and democracy” and writing “As Russia wages its premeditated, illegal war against Ukraine, killing thousands of innocents – even children – it is essential that America and our allies make clear that we never give in to autocrats.”

Al Jazeera’s Shihab Rattansi, reporting from Washinton, DC, said Pelosi appeared to be framing the visit as part of a wider effort to bolster democracies around the world.

“As soon as she arrived, various tweets, various articles, various statements were released, positioning Pelosi as a freedom fighter in the battle against autocracy on behalf of democracy,” he said.

“She compared her trip to Taiwan to her trip in April to Ukraine, as part of this international remit that she feels she has, to travel the world promoting democracy.”

Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies

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