HomeAmericaSenior US diplomat says Taiwan arms sale does not hinge on China

Senior US diplomat says Taiwan arms sale does not hinge on China

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By Michael Martina and David ‌Brunnstrom

WASHINGTON, June 25 (Reuters) - The U.S. State Department's top diplomat for East ​Asia said on Thursday that a pending arms sale notification to Congress for Taiwan does not hinge on discussions ⁠with China, despite that suggestion from President Donald Trump.

Trump has repeatedly sown confusion about a $14 billion weapons package for Taiwan intended to bolster the island's deterrence against Chinese military action, saying ​in May that he had discussed the issue in a meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. 

In an interview following ‌his meeting with Xi, Trump called the package a good "bargaining chip" that he was holding in "abeyance," adding that it depended on China.

Those comments, which dismayed officials in Taiwan, were an apparent departure ⁠from long-standing U.S. policy known as the "Six Assurances" to Taiwan that such weapons ⁠sales would not be negotiated with Beijing.

Asked during a House Foreign Affairs Committee subcommittee hearing to confirm that a decision on whether to advance the weapons sale did not depend on talks with Beijing, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Michael DeSombre said: "Correct." 

DeSombre, ‌who was nominated for his position by Trump, added that the Six Assurances still guided U.S. ⁠policy.

"I think we can assure you that whenever we meet with ‌China, they raise the questions of Taiwan and Taiwan ​arms sales," he said. "So, it's something that is always discussed with them, but that is not in any way a deviation from the Six Assurances."

DeSombre did not give a timeline for ‌a decision on the arms package, which he said was still ​under review by Trump.

China claims Taiwan as ⁠its own territory and has long opposed U.S. weapons sales to the ‌island, which Beijing sees as interference in its ⁠internal affairs.

Following Trump's meeting with Xi, Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te has said the island would not be sacrificed or traded. 

The United States, despite lacking formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan, remains Taiwan's most ​important international backer and largest supplier ‌of arms. It is required by U.S. law to provide Taiwan with the means to defend ⁠itself.

Despite the concerns over Trump's comments, in December ​his administration approved an $11 billion arms sales package, the largest ever. 

(Reporting by Michael Martina ​and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Andrea Ricci )

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