President Lai: Taiwan geeft zijn vrije en democratische levenswijze niet op onder druk

Fresh off high-stakes talks between U.S. and Chinese leaders that centered heavily on the Taiwan issue, Taiwanese President William Lai Ching-te has issued a clear rebuke of mounting pressure from Beijing, pledging the island will never be forced to abandon its democratic system and sovereign status.

In a social media post laying out his administration’s stance, Lai emphasized that Taiwan has no intention of provoking or escalating conflict across the Taiwan Strait. At the same time, he made clear the island will not sacrifice its national sovereignty, dignity, and free democratic way of life in the face of external coercion. Lai reiterated that Taiwan has long been a committed defender of the cross-strait status quo, and is not the party seeking to alter the current arrangement. He went so far as to name China as the fundamental source of regional instability in the area.

Beijing has long claimed Taiwan as an integral part of its territory, and has repeatedly threatened to use military force to achieve unification if the island formally moves toward independence. The Taiwan question remained a core, contentious topic during the recent summit meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

According to Chinese state media, Xi described the Taiwan issue as the single most sensitive core question in bilateral relations between Washington and Beijing. He warned that improper handling of the question could trigger severe conflict that would put the entire bilateral relationship at irreversible risk.

While the United States has not formally recognized Taiwan as an independent sovereign state, successive U.S. administrations have maintained robust unofficial support for the island, including through billions of dollars in arms sales and consistent diplomatic statements that imply Washington would intervene to defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese attack.

Following his closed-door summit with Xi, Trump told reporters that Xi holds extremely firm opposition to any move toward Taiwanese independence. The U.S. president, however, declined to commit to approving a new $11 billion arms sales package to Taiwan that has already cleared approval from the U.S. Congress. “I haven’t approved it yet. We’ll see what happens,” Trump told reporters.

For his part, Lai framed U.S. security cooperation and arms deliveries to Taiwan as critical foundational elements for sustaining regional peace and stability. He argued that these commitments are not just a security guarantee from the U.S. to Taiwan, but also serve as the most effective deterrent to actions that would undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait and broader Indo-Pacific region.