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Taiwan keeping close tabs on upcoming Trump-Xi meeting: Official

10/21/2025 01:43 PM
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Wang Liang-yu, head of the Department of North American Affairs in the foreign ministry. CNA photo Oct, 21, 2025
Wang Liang-yu, head of the Department of North American Affairs in the foreign ministry. CNA photo Oct, 21, 2025

Taipei, Oct. 21 (CNA) A senior Taiwanese foreign affairs official said Tuesday that Taipei is in close contact with Washington to make sure its interests are protected, ahead of a meeting between United States President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), which is expected to include the Taiwan issue.

Taiwan always keeps close tabs on high-level exchanges between Washington and Beijing, said Wang Liang-yu (王良玉), head of the Department of North American Affairs in the foreign ministry.

Taipei also maintains "a smooth communication channel" with Washington at all times and will keep a close eye on the latest high-level talks between the U.S. and China, Wang said at a foreign ministry news briefing.

"We will make sure that the bilateral relations between Taiwan and the U.S. continue to deepen steadily and that Taiwan's interests are protected," she said, when asked about Trump's earlier statement that Taiwan will be on the agenda of his upcoming meeting with Xi.

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday, Trump said "rare earths, fentanyl, soybeans and Taiwan" are some of the divisive topics that will be discussed when he meets with Xi next week at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea, according to a Bloomberg report.

Meanwhile, before meeting Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the White House on Monday, Trump told reporters that he expects to reach a trade deal with Xi soon, and he downplayed the risks of the two superpowers clashing over Taiwan.

When asked about an earlier Pentagon assessment that Xi could attempt to seize Taiwan in the next six years, Trump said he doubts that China would invade Taiwan.

"I think we'll be just fine with China. China doesn't want to do that," Trump told reporters, according to a Reuters report.

He said, however, that Taiwan is probably a key issue for Xi.

"Now that doesn't mean it's not the apple of his eye, because probably it is, but I don't see anything happening," Trump said.

Without explicitly pledging to defend Taiwan in case of a Chinese invasion, Trump said China knows that the U.S. "is the strongest military power in the world by far."

"We have the best of everything, and nobody's going to mess with that. And I don't see that at all with President Xi," Trump was quoted as saying in the Reuters report.

"I think we're going to get along very well as it pertains to Taiwan and others," he said.

Since taking office in January 2025, Trump has not made any clear statements on the protection of Taiwan in the event of an invasion by China.

The U.S. longstanding position on the issue has been one of "strategic ambiguity," which is aimed at deterring Beijing from an attempted invasion without committing to involvement in such a war.

However, Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, had said publicly on several occasions that the U.S. would defend Taiwan if China attacked.

Each time, Biden administration officials later walked back his statements, signaling that the U.S. policy on Taiwan had not changed.

(By Joseph Yeh)

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