November 4, 2024
Taiwan Hosts Dozens Of Foreign Lawmakers In D.C. To Lobby For China Sanctions

Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,

Taiwan’s de facto ambassador to the US hosted dozens of foreign lawmakers in Washington DC to push for more sanctions on China, Reuters reported this week.

The Taiwanese official, Hsiao Bi-khim, hosted the gathering of about 60 lawmakers from Europe, Asia, and Africa at Taipei’s diplomatic mansion in Washington, known as Twin Oaks.

17-acre estate of Twin Oaks, via Wiki Commons

The meeting was attended by two representatives from Ukraine, who were welcomed by Hsiao. "We certainly hope that as the international community stands with Ukraine, that the international community will also stand with Taiwan … that together we can deter the further aggression coming from China," she told the gathering.

The gathering came amid reports that the US is considering sanctions on China to deter it from attacking Taiwan and that Taipei is lobbying the EU to take similar action.

The meeting included members of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC), a group of international lawmakers that was formed in 2020 to work against Beijing. Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and Marco Rubio (R-FL) serve as the American representatives to IPAC.

IPAC is holding a separate meeting in Washington this week, and according to a draft document obtained by Reuters, the group will sign a pledge to adopt "greater deterrence against military or other coercive" Chinese actions against Taiwan.

Ukrainian officials were present at the D.C. event to talk 'deterring' Chinese aggression...

On Wednesday, the Senate Armed Services Committee, which is chaired by Menendez, advanced a bill that would give Taiwan $6.5 billion in military aid and radically alter US policy toward the island.

Tyler Durden Thu, 09/15/2022 - 14:47

Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,

Taiwan’s de facto ambassador to the US hosted dozens of foreign lawmakers in Washington DC to push for more sanctions on China, Reuters reported this week.

The Taiwanese official, Hsiao Bi-khim, hosted the gathering of about 60 lawmakers from Europe, Asia, and Africa at Taipei’s diplomatic mansion in Washington, known as Twin Oaks.

17-acre estate of Twin Oaks, via Wiki Commons

The meeting was attended by two representatives from Ukraine, who were welcomed by Hsiao. “We certainly hope that as the international community stands with Ukraine, that the international community will also stand with Taiwan … that together we can deter the further aggression coming from China,” she told the gathering.

The gathering came amid reports that the US is considering sanctions on China to deter it from attacking Taiwan and that Taipei is lobbying the EU to take similar action.

The meeting included members of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC), a group of international lawmakers that was formed in 2020 to work against Beijing. Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and Marco Rubio (R-FL) serve as the American representatives to IPAC.

IPAC is holding a separate meeting in Washington this week, and according to a draft document obtained by Reuters, the group will sign a pledge to adopt “greater deterrence against military or other coercive” Chinese actions against Taiwan.

Ukrainian officials were present at the D.C. event to talk ‘deterring’ Chinese aggression…

On Wednesday, the Senate Armed Services Committee, which is chaired by Menendez, advanced a bill that would give Taiwan $6.5 billion in military aid and radically alter US policy toward the island.