US House Speaker Pelosi begins Asia tour, no mention of Taiwan
The House of Representatives speaker confirms she will visit four Asian countries amid speculation she might visit Taiwan, fuelling US tensions with Beijing.
US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi starts a tour of four Asian countries on Sunday, her office has said, without mentioning Taiwan amid speculation she might visit the self-ruled island claimed by China.
“Speaker Nancy Pelosi is leading a Congressional delegation to the Indo-Pacific region, including visits to Singapore, Malaysia, South Korea and Japan,” her office said in a press release on Sunday.
The statement said the visit would include those countries, but did not specify whether Pelosi, who is number three in the line of United States presidential succession, might make other stops.
“The trip will focus on mutual security, economic partnership and democratic governance in the Indo-Pacific region,” it said.
Gregory Meeks, chair of the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs, was among the delegation listed.
China views visits by US officials to Taiwan as sending an encouraging signal to the pro-independence camp on the island. Washington does not have official diplomatic ties with Taiwan, but is bound by law to provide the island with the means to defend itself.
A visit by Pelosi would be a dramatic, though not unprecedented, show of US support for Taiwan. Republican Newt Gingrich was the last House speaker to visit Taiwan in 1997.
Chinese President Xi Jinping warned his US counterpart Joe Biden on Thursday that Washington should abide by the one-China principle and “those who play with fire will perish by it”.
Biden told Xi that US policy on Taiwan had not changed and that Washington strongly opposes unilateral efforts to change the status quo or undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.
Al Jazeera’s White House Correspondent Kimberly Halkett said that while Pelosi’s travel schedule has been announced, there is a possibility that Taiwan could be added to the list of countries at the last minute.
“Given the fact that there has been controversy, it’s not surprising that it’s not on the initial schedule,” Halkett said.
“The message from the Chinese government [during Thursday’s two-hour phone call] was very clear to the US side: that any sort of visit by the house speaker would be seen as meddling in Chinese affairs. There has been a strong warning that has been issued, but ultimately it is up to the house speaker on whether or not she will make that trip.”
Taiwan’s foreign ministry said on Friday after the call between Xi and Biden that Taiwan would continue to deepen its close security partnership with the US.
Chinese air force spokesman Shen Jinke was quoted by state media as saying on Sunday that Beijing would “resolutely safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity”.
Shen said at a military airshow that the air force has many types of fighter jets capable of circling “the precious island of our motherland”, referring to Taiwan.
He said China’s “air force has the firm will, full confidence and sufficient capability to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity”.
A comment on Friday by a People’s Liberation Army unit on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like social media platform – “Prepare for war!” – received 1.87 million thumbs-ups.
South China Sea
As US aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan and its strike group returned to the South China Sea by Thursday, China ramped up military exercises in the vicinity.
On Saturday, Chinese military held live-firing drills in the waters off Fujian province, more than 100km (62 miles) away from Taiwan, according to local authorities.
The Chinese coast guard will hold an exercise in the South China Sea off Guangzhou province on Monday, according to another notice by the Maritime Safety Administration.
Prominent Chinese commentator Hu Xijin said on Saturday that he deleted a tweet warning of military retaliation should US fighter jets escort Pelosi on a Taiwan visit, after Twitter blocked his account.
White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said on Friday that the US has seen no evidence of looming Chinese military activity against Taiwan.
On Wednesday, Biden told reporters he thought the US military believed a Pelosi visit to Taiwan was “not a good idea right now”.
Pelosi’s Asian tour comes at a politically sensitive time for Chinese and US leaders.
Xi is expected to seek a precedent-breaking third term at a National People’s Congress later this year, while in the US, Biden’s Democratic Party will face a hard fight to retain control of the US House of Representatives at November’s midterm elections.