Taiwan’s foreign minister Joseph Wu urged the international community Wednesday to help defend his country and region against “expansionist” Chinese moves, saying Taipei feared Beijing would resort to force.

Taiwan was “on the front line defending democracies from being taken over by the communist China” and needed help from other countries, he told the France 24 TV station.

Joseph Wu Taiwan
Joseph Wu. File photo: Taiwan Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Wu said China “has been intensifying its military threat against Taiwan” in recent years and had stepped up military exercises in the region.

More than 30 Chinese military planes have recently crossed into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone, he said, describing this as “very threatening”.

“We have been trying very hard in the last few years to beef up our own defence capabilities and at the same time we also want to let the international community understand that Taiwan as a democracy has been threatened by China, which is an authoritarian country which is trying to expand its influence,” the minister said.

China views self-ruled Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to one day seize it — by force if necessary.

Tsai Ing-wen
Tsai Ing-wen. File photo: Office of the President of Taiwan, via Flickr.

Beijing has ramped up diplomatic, economic and military pressure on Taiwan since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who refuses to acknowledge the island is part of “one China”.

Wu said a war with China “can be a real possibility if you look at the Chinese way of threatening Taiwan”.

He also pointed to Chinese actions in the South China Sea, on the border with India, and in Hong Kong as examples of a threat to regional stability and the sovereignty of nations.

“We feel that like-minded countries or fellow democracies need to pay more attention to this area and come to each other’s help so that China’s expansionist motivation can be deterred.”

South China Sea US Military
US military air crafts on South China Sea. File Photo: Seaman Tomas Compian via USGov.

The minister said Taiwan appreciated the United States “continuing to show its presence in this region, conducting freedom-of-navigation operations across the Taiwan strait or even the regions close to Taiwan.

“I think this is a show to the Chinese side that its military threat against other peace-loving countries wouldn’t have been tolerated.”

Taiwan feared, Wu added, that China’s national security law for Hong Kong, aimed at stamping out demonstrations, was but the “first step… in expanding its authoritarian order to the region.”

“After Hong Kong we are very concerned that Taiwan might be the next and therefore we are working very hard to defend ourselves.”

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