TAIPEI: Taiwan’s foreign minister said Friday the self-ruled island must rely on itself for defence after US presidential candidate Donald Trump insisted Taipei “should pay” Washington for defence in the event of a conflict with neighbouring China.
China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has in recent years stepped up its military presence and sabre-rattling rhetoric towards the democratic island.
The United States has stepped up military aid and weapons sales to Taiwan to counter China, but Trump said earlier this week the island “should pay” Washington for defence.
In response Friday, Taiwan’s newly minted foreign minister Lin Chia-lung said Taipei took the former president’s comments “very seriously”.
“Everyone should have this consensus that the threat is China,” he told reporters in his first briefing with foreign media since his appointment to the Cabinet of Taiwan’s new President Lai Ching-te.
“As far as national defence is concerned, we must rely on ourselves,” he said, adding Taiwan has increased its military budget from 2 per cent to 2.5 per cent of its GDP in eight years.
“I expect it will continue to increase,” he said, adding that the budget will go not just to purchasing more weapons but also instating military reforms.