A number of former US foreign and security officials have visited Taiwan this week – but none have gone as far as former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in making their demands.
During a visit to Taiwan, former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo advocated establishing diplomatic relations between the US and the island’s democratic republic.
In a speech in Taipei on Friday, Pompeo said the US government should take the “necessary and long-overdue step” and offer recognition to Taiwan as a “free and sovereign country.”
“It’s about recognizing the unmistakably existing reality,” said Pompeo, who met with Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen the day before. “There is no need for Taiwan to declare independence because it is already an independent country.”
Pompeo is among a number of former US foreign and security leaders visiting Taiwan this week amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. However, no one has gone so far as to call for US diplomatic recognition of Taiwan. Rather, they opposed a unilateral change in the status quo.
The communist leadership in Beijing regards the free island as part of the People’s Republic and threatens to conquer it. Earlier, former US Chief of Staff Mike Mullen, at the head of a delegation, reaffirmed US commitments to Taiwan. Ensuring peace and security in the Taiwan Strait is not only in the interests of the US, but also of the world.
The US has committed to Taiwan’s defense capability and is supplying weapons. Previous US administrations have left open whether they would come to the island’s military aid in the event of an attack to deter Beijing. But US President Biden said in October that the US had an “obligation” to do so.
Source: Stern

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