Taiwan nudges US Speaker of the House to meet on US soil


Briefly: Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen will reportedly meet US Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy in the US rather than Taiwan, to avoid another escalation with China. The meeting will likely happen in April, when Tsai is scheduled to pass through the US en route to Central America.

Some context: Tsai’s proposal aims to avoid a repeat of last year’s drama, when former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan led to China’s massive and unprecedented live-fire drills near the island. 

McCarthy had previously pledged to do a Pelosi (visit Taiwan, not master the art of sarcastic applause). But Taiwan seems to have quietly steered him to meet in the US instead. They’ll likely meet in California (McCarthy’s home state), where the optics will be less ‘official’ and so less provocative from Beijing’s perspective. 

Intrigue’s take: One can understand the impulse to show solidarity with a small democracy facing an existential threat. But Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan last year offered China a pretext to ramp up pressure on Taiwan, while doing little to support Taiwan in practice.

So Taiwan’s California solution tries to thread that needle: McCarthy can show US solidarity, without inviting another major escalatory response from Beijing.

Logical, right? But Beijing has its own logic: regardless of location, China says it doesn’t want its ‘renegade province’ meeting the second in line to the US presidency. So either way, we can probably expect more fireworks over the Taiwan Strait. 

Also worth noting: 

  • On Tuesday, China’s new Foreign Minister Qin Gang accused the US of pursuing policies that increased the probability of a US-China conflict. 
  • The US recently approved a $619M arms procurement deal with the Taiwanese military. 
Latest Author Articles
The OECD is cautiously optimistic

Today we’re doing what we do best: wading through 200-something pages of turgid prose and acronyms to get you what you need to know.

3 May, 2024
KFC closes Malaysian stores amid Israel boycott

The Malaysian operator of fast food giant Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) announced on Monday it was temporarily closing outlets across the country, citing “challenging economic conditions”. Local media then said the quiet bit out loud: 100 or so KFC outlets are closing in Malaysia due to an ongoing boycott.

1 May, 2024
World’s biggest miner launches bid to become copper super-producer

Australia’s BHP, the world’s largest mining company, wants to get just a little bit larger. Yesterday (Thursday) the firm announced it had made a $39B bid for one of its main competitors, London-listed Anglo American.

26 April, 2024
Tesla, BYD and the race for global EV dominance

Not many companies can issue a recall on their latest product, lay off 10% of their workforce, report a 9% drop in revenue, and still somehow ride a 13% bump in share price. But that’s what US EV-maker Tesla has just done.

25 April, 2024