Summary

  • Top US Democrat Nancy Pelosi leaves Taiwan after meeting its President Tsai Ing-wen, despite warnings from China not to do so

  • She praised Taiwan as an island of resilience and said the US commitment to democracy there was iron-clad

  • China says it will hold a series of live-fire military drills in the air and sea around the island from Thursday

  • Taiwan says the move violates the island's sovereignty and amounts to a blockade

  • The US speaker's trip, which was not backed by President Biden, was the first by such a senior US official in 25 years

  • Beijing sees self-ruled Taiwan - which lies 100 miles from the Chinese mainland - as a breakaway province that will eventually be under its control

  1. US 'will not respond to China's aggression'published at 20:57 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    John KirbyImage source, Reuters

    More now from the White House briefing.

    John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, continues by talking about China's military response to the visit today.

    He says the US will "not engage in sabre-rattling".

  2. No need to turn Taiwan visit into a crisis, says USpublished at 20:53 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    We've just been listening to a press briefing at the White House.

    Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told journalists Nancy Pelosi's visit was consistent with the One China policy. [This policy means the US acknowledges China’s position that there's only one Chinese government.]

    He says there is no need to turn it into a crisis - the US still does not support independence for Taiwan.

    He adds the US is against any changes to the status quo and that any differences should be resolved by peaceful means.

  3. Why young people in Taiwan are learning to fightpublished at 20:52 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Rupert Wingfield-Hayes
    BBC News, Taiwan

    Lisa Hsueh
    Image caption,

    "I'll stand up to protect myself and my family," says Lisa Hsueh

    Friends who know I am in Taiwan have been sending me increasingly alarming messages - "I hope you have your flak jacket with you!" "Does your hotel have a bomb shelter?"

    They've seen the fire-breathing rhetoric coming from Chinese state media, most notably the Global Times, and have concluded that Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan could end very badly.

    Indeed some very eminent US-based China scholars have said the same, calling the visit "reckless" and warning against "pushing Beijing into a corner".

    That's not how it's viewed here.

    Freddy Lim is a one-time heavy metal singer, and now a ruling party MP. These days Freddy sports a short haircut and a smart shirt, but tattoos still peek out from beneath his neatly pressed cuffs.

    "There is a basic principle that we welcome high level politicians like Nancy Pelosi coming to Taiwan. It's very important. It is not a provocation against China. It is welcoming a friend in a normal way, just like any other country," he told the BBC.

    Read in full

  4. China trying to 'psychologically intimidate' Taiwanpublished at 20:42 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Beijing's decision to announce three days of live fire exercises is China's way of psychologically intimidating Taiwan's citizens, the island's defence ministry says.

    China's People’s Liberation Army will conduct three-day live fire exercises starting from tomorrow,

    But the ministry is telling people not to worry, as the armed forces have "reinforced" their alertness level and are closely monitoring the situation.

    The military has the ability and confidence to ensure Taiwan's security, it adds.

  5. Site crashes due to huge numbers tracking Pelosi flightpublished at 20:19 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    So many people were trying to track whether Nancy Pelosi was flying to Taiwan that a tracking website crashed.

    Flightradar24 recorded a site record of more than 708,000 visitors and said it had to limit non-subscribers' access in order to keep the service online.

    "Unfortunately, due to the volume of users, it was necessary to deploy our waiting room functionality, which meters access," the company said in a statement, referring to "unprecedented" interest.

    The reason for the huge interest was that Pelosi's visit - part of a wider trip to the region - had not been officially confirmed.

  6. China 'could retaliate by backing Russia in Ukraine'published at 20:11 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    As live footage was shown of Pelosi's plane touching down in Taipei, the western world is "holding our breath", says Margaret MacMillan, emeritus professor of international history at Oxford University.

    "Let's hope it isn't one of those historic moments where we all look back and say 'oh that really was the beginning of something'", she told the BBC.

    "What is the Chinese government going to do and will it change their stance on other things, on Ukraine?

    "The Chinese have not condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine but they have not sold them weapons. They haven’t really egged them on in Ukraine, they haven’t shown wholehearted support for them.

    "I wonder if that will change."

  7. Taiwan visit is a clear provocation, says Russiapublished at 19:57 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin in MoscowImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    China's Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin pictured in Moscow

    Russia has warned that Pelosi's trip to Taiwan is a "clear provocation" and risks a conflict.

    Earlier, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said "everything about this tour and the possible visit to Taiwan is purely provocative".

    Now, Moscow's foreign ministry is saying China has the right to "take measures to protect its sovereignty".

  8. What's been happening?published at 19:42 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Pelosi and Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph WuImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    Pelosi was greeted by Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu

    It's entered the early hours of Wednesday in Taiwan now. Here's a re-cap of what's been happening tonight:

    • US Speaker Nancy Pelosi has touched down in Taiwan as part of a tour of Asia
    • The trip, which is not backed by President Joe Biden, is the first by such a senior US official in decades
    • China has branded the landmark visit "extremely dangerous"
    • "Those who play with fire will perish by it," Beijing warned in a statement
    • But Pelosi said US solidarity with Taiwan "is more important today than ever, as the world faces a choice between autocracy and democracy"
    • As her plane touched down, Chinese state media reported that its military jets were crossing the Taiwan strait
    • Russia has called the visit a "clear provocation
    • Pelosi will meet Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen in the morning, then fly out after lunch, the country's official central news agency says

    Read our full news story here.

  9. Taiwan a rare issue with bipartisan US supportpublished at 19:23 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    John Sudworth
    Reporting from Washington

    Nancy Pelosi’s visit is garnering a fair bit of bipartisan support from Republican opponents who’d usually be very unlikely to count themselves among her fanbase.

    With former senior officials from the Trump administration Mike Pompeo and John Bolton tweeting their approval, it’s a reminder of how – regardless of the Biden administration’s attempts to dissuade her from travelling – China’s increasing threats over Taiwan are only serving to build a rare space for consensus in a political landscape normally riven by partisan division.

    This week, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is due to discuss a new piece of proposed legislation, the Taiwan Policy Act of 2022, crafted by both Democrat and Republican senators which would boost US military assistance to the island and designate it as a “major non-Nato ally”.

    There is plenty of dissenting opinion, of course, including an op-ed in the New York Times describing Pelosi’s trip as “utterly reckless”. It includes the claim that the Biden administration has – so far – had some success in persuading China’s President Xi Jinping not to supply the Russians with military aid for their invasion of Ukraine.

    That could now be put in jeopardy, the political commentator Thomas Friedman suggests.

    In another example of unintended consequences, Pelosi’s visit provides a window onto a new dimension in global news reporting – the presence of a much boosted locally based foreign press corps in Taiwan.

    China’s growing intolerance of independent journalism in recent years, and multiple expulsions and forced departures (including my own), have seen many foreign reporters setting up instead in Taipei – an outcome that the Chinese authorities will not be too pleased about.

  10. Taiwan calls fighter jet rumours 'fake news'published at 19:07 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Taiwan has denied claims that Chinese Su-35s were flying across the Taiwan Strait.

    Taiwan's defence ministry said there were internet rumours to that effect, but that they were "fake news" and its citizens should not spread this information online.

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  11. China's military response, as promisedpublished at 18:54 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Stephen McDonell
    China correspondent

    Beijing promised military action if Nancy Pelosi's visited Taiwan and that what we are seeing.

    As soon as the US House Speaker landed, China's state media was ready to go, announcing that the country's fighter jets were flying across the Taiwan Strait, as a show of force.

    Soon Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Hua Chunying was tweeting, "China has been compelled to act in self-defence. Any countermeasure to be taken by China would be a justified & necessary response to the US oblivion to China's repeated démarches and the US's unscrupulous behaviour".

    It looks like the centrepiece of China's response will be a series of live-fire exercises in the waters ringing the island over several days.

    According to the People’s Liberation Army, in six huge areas off Taiwan's North, South, East and West coasts, China’s aircraft and ships will be manoeuvring and testing long-range ammunition.

    The extent to which her visit has increased regional tensions will be debated but so will the extent to which these PLA exercises may deter senior politicians from the US travelling to Taiwan in the future.

    If not, what might Beijing try next time?

  12. The importance of Pelosi's flight pathpublished at 18:41 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    The Boeing C-40C flight SPAR19 carrying the delegation headed by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrives in Songshan Airport in Taipei, TaiwanImage source, Ritchie B Tongo/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

    The BBC's Asia Pacific editor Celia Hatton has been calling Pelosi's trip to Taiwan a "historic moment".

    But before she'd even stepped off the plane, Pelosi was already sending a message to China, Hatton tells the World Service.

    When she left Malaysia, her flight path was being watched very closely by Chinese social media.

    As she entered Taiwan from the east – up the coast of the Philippines – she stayed well away from the Taiwan Strait.

    The flight path would be decided by Washington. So this could be one of the little signals between the two rival superpowers that they don't want an escalation, adds Hatton.

  13. Hong Kong's leader condemns Pelosi visitpublished at 18:30 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Hong Kong's new Chief Executive, John LeeImage source, Getty Images

    Hong Kong's leader has strongly condemned Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan.

    The territory's new chief executive John Lee said his government had an "unwavering determination in and a clear stance against any advocacy of 'Taiwan independence'".

    Pelosi's visit was tantamount to encouraging "Taiwan independence'" and openly challenged the one China principle, he added, and showed contempt for the well-being of more than 20 million people in Taiwan.

    Beijing has in the past said that Taiwan could become a Special Administrative Region of China like Hong Kong.

  14. What is the 'One China' policy?published at 18:14 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Chinese flagImage source, Getty Images

    Since 1979, the US has agreed to recognise the “One China” policy.

    It means the US acknowledges China’s position that there’s only one Chinese government.

    So what does that mean for Taiwan?

    Under the policy, the US has formal ties with China, not Taiwan.

    But the US still supports the island and has promised to help it defend itself, including supplying arms.

    The "One China" policy is a key cornerstone of Sino-US relations. But it’s different to the One China principle, which is China’s insistence that it will one day fully take back Taiwan.

    China's ruling Communist Party has threatened to use force if Taiwan ever formally declares independence.

  15. WATCH: Pelosi's motorcade rolls to Taipei hotelpublished at 17:59 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    The US Democrat's motorcade arrives at the hotel she and her delegation will be staying in Taipei, Taiwan's capital.

  16. Pelosi visit highlights changing realities for Taiwanpublished at 17:41 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    John Sudworth
    Reporting from Washington

    Arrival of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in TaiwanImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    Pelosi landed in Taiwan at 22:44 local time

    Nancy Pelosi’s flight, and the geopolitical storm surrounding it, have brought into sharp focus some of the changing realities for Taiwan, its people and its relationship with China and the US.

    For decades, the two big superpowers have relied on two little words - "One China" – to do a lot of heavy lifting. Beijing uses the principle as the basis for its claim of sovereignty over Taiwan, while the US argues that, in its adherence to a "One China" policy, it merely acknowledges that the claim exists.

    The deliberate ambiguity in this formula is now being stretched to breaking point.

    Few observers any longer dare to hope that it will buy time for China’s economic development to eventually bring with it a softening of its political model. Or, alternatively, for deepening trade ties that would build a dependency that makes the threat of war redundant.

    Instead, today, China is as unapologetically authoritarian and intolerant of dissent as it ever was, and Taiwan is a vibrant democracy, with free elections and a flourishing civil society. It’s a shift that poses major questions both for the US and for the Chinese Communist Party which sees the territory drifting - in terms of values and identity – ever further from its grasp.

    A US politician flying for a short visit to a long-standing ally would in any other place be of little note.

    But in Pelosi’s visit, the symbolism itself is substance.

  17. Lunch and a meeting on the agendapublished at 17:29 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Tsai Ing-wenImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen

    It's night-time now in Taiwan, so plans are under way for what happens next in diplomatic moves on Wednesday.

    Nancy Pelosi will meet Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen in the morning, then fly out after lunch, the country's official central news agency says.

    The hope from Taiwan's presidential office is that the visit will deepen its partnership with the US, Reuters reports.

    It adds the aim is to maintain peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.

  18. China condemns Pelosi visit as a serious violationpublished at 17:13 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    China's Foreign Affairs Ministry has strongly condemned Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan, calling it a "serious violation of the One-China principle" that will have a "severe impact" on the political foundation of China-US relations.

    In a statement, the ministry said Pelosi's visit "seriously infringes upon China's sovereignty and territorial integrity".

    "It gravely undermines peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, and sends a seriously wrong signal to the separatist forces for 'Taiwan independence'", the ministry said.

    China strongly urged the US to "stop playing the 'Taiwan card' and interfering in China's internal affairs", and to "not go further down the wrong and dangerous path".

    You can read the statement in full here., external

  19. China to conduct live fire exercisespublished at 17:02 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    China's People’s Liberation Army will conduct three-day live fire exercises starting from tomorrow, its state media has confirmed, with all civil ships and planes forbidden from entering the exercise regions.

    China also suspended imports from 35 Taiwanese exporters of biscuits and pastries today, in a warning ahead of Pelosi's visit to Taiwan.

    Biscuits and pastries are important trading items between Taiwan and China, including Hong Kong.

    About two thirds of exports from Taiwan in 2021 were biscuits and pastries, with a total value of $646m, Taiwanese media reports. In 2020, the value reached $660m, accounting for 37% of the total export.

    It is estimated that over 100 companies in Taiwan will be forced to stop doing business with China after the sanction became effective.

  20. In pictures: What's been happening on the streets?published at 16:51 British Summer Time 2 August 2022

    Local journalists film outside the Grand Hyatt hotelImage source, EPA
    Image caption,

    Local journalists have been filming outside the Grand Hyatt hotel where US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is expected to stay during her visit to the Taiwanese capital, Taipei

    A US secret service officer gestures as a motorcade with US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi unseen leaves the St. Regis hotel in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 02 August 2022Image source, EPA
    Image caption,

    She's flown in from the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur on this unscheduled but highly-anticipated leg of her Asia tour. Here, a security guard directs her motorcade

    Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs of China, Hua Chunying reacts during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, China, 02 August 2022Image source, EPA
    Image caption,

    China's Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs, Hua Chunying, told a press conference earlier that China has been in communication with the US the visit to Taiwan. And China raised a warning that its military will not sit idle should the visit happen

    Demonstrators take part in a protest against U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi"s visit, in Taipei, Taiwan August 2, 2022.Image source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Demonstrators for and against the visit have been out and about in Taipei. Here, they protest against the visit, ahead of her arrival on Tuesday evening, local time