Two American groups that received Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen during her recent visit to the United States have been sanctioned by China, despite vehement opposition from Beijing.
The Hudson Institute, a think tank with its headquarters in Washington, and the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, located in California, have been prohibited from cooperating, exchanging, or conducting business with institutions or people in China, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Friday.
The announcement also warned that key executives of the groups would have their assets in China frozen and would not be permitted to conduct business or collaborate with entities or people there.
“The Hudson Institute and the Reagan Library have provided a platform and facilitated Tsai’s separatist activities… which seriously undermines China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” the ministry said, using a term often used to criticize the actions of Taiwan’s leader.
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library was the site of a meeting between Tsai and US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Wednesday – the first time a Taiwan president had met a US Speaker on American soil.
And last week, the Hudson Institute presented a Global Leadership Award to Tsai in New York City.
Both occurred during stopovers in the course of the Taiwan President’s 10-day international tour, which included official visits to Central America.
In a statement posted to Twitter Friday by the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute, President and CEO David Trulio said the organization was “proud of its decision” to host the meeting between Tsai and McCarthy.
“We will not shy away from living up to President Reagan’s expectation that the foundation and institute bearing his name be a ‘dynamic intellectual forum,’” Trulio said. The organization, created by the late president, encompasses the Reagan library.
Hudson Institute President and CEO John Walters said in a separate statement on the institute’s website that it stood “firmly with Taiwan and against the CCP (Chinese Communist Party).”
“The Chinese Communist Party has a long history of attempting to silence voices, domestically and abroad, that oppose its international aggression and its oppression of the Chinese people. It has not worked before and it will not work now,” said Walters, who is among four leaders between the two organizations targeted by the sanctions.
It’s unclear if either organization or its leaders have assets or cooperation in China that would be impacted.
China had repeatedly said it would take “resolute and strong measures” in response to Tsai’s meeting with McCarthy.
China’s Communist Party claims the self-governing democracy of Taiwan as its own despite never having controlled it, and has vowed to take the island, by force if necessary.
China also imposed sanctions on two Taiwanese organizations, The Prospect Foundation and Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats,on Friday, according to the Taiwan Affairs Office.
A spokesperson accused the groups of promoting Taiwan independence and said they could not cooperate with mainland organizations and individuals. Their directors were also barred from entering the mainland.
Hsiao Bi-khim, Taiwan representative to the US, was also hit with sanctions on Friday, according to Chinese state media. Hsiao was previously sanctioned by China last August, following a visit from then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to the island. On her Twitter account on Friday, Hsiao reacted to the sanctions saying, “Wow, the PRC just sanctions me again, for the second time.”
Taiwan’s foreign ministry responded later Friday calling China’s decision to impose new sanctions over Tsai’s meeting with McCarthy “irrational and absurd.”
It was Taiwan’s “fundamental right” to conduct diplomatic activities overseas, and “coercion and suppression” from Beijing would only boost its “insistence on freedom and democracy,” the statement said.
Beijing’s overall response to the latest meeting has appeared muted so far compared with its actions following Pelosi’s visit.
Then, Beijing launched extensive military drills around the island following the Speaker’s departure and suspended several lines of communication with Washington.
This time there has been little clear military response toward the island, which sees regular incursions into its air defense identification zone and patrols in surrounding waters by the Chinese military.
Ahead of the meeting between Tsai and McCarthy, Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said it had tracked a Chinese aircraft carrier group, led by the carrier Shandong, passing through waters southeast of Taiwan for training in the Western Pacific.
China’s retaliation against the US organizations comes at a tense time between the two powers, which have struggled to stabilize their relationship amid friction over a range of issues.
Among those is bolstered American support of Taiwan in the face of increased military, economic and diplomatic pressure on the island democracy from Beijing.
On Friday, US Republican congressman Michael McCaul, who is currently visiting Taiwan, said that speeding up the delivery of weapons to the island was “critically important” in building deterrence against China.
The chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee told reporters that “we are doing everything in our power to expedite [weapon delivery],” and that the bipartisan congressional delegation he is leading is “in broad agreement that this absolutely needs to be done, to provide the deterrence for Taiwan to promote peace in the region.”
McCaul said that potential ways to do so included reprioritizing weapon sales to Taiwan or through third-party sales.
The US maintains an unofficial relationship with Taiwan and Tsai’s transit in the country was therefore not an official visit in order to keep Washington aligned with its longstanding “One China” policy.
Under the policy, the US acknowledges China’s position that Taiwan is part of China, but has never officially recognized Beijing’s claim to the island of 23 million.
Tsai arrived back in Taiwan on Friday, and said her government would not cease having exchanges with the world despite “impediments.”
“We have shown to the international community that when faced with pressure and threats, Taiwan will be even more united. We will never succumb to suppression, and we will also never cease having exchanges with the international community because of impediments,” Tsai said.
“Going forward, Taiwan will not only contribute its expertise and be a force of good for the world, but will also cooperate with other international partners actively for more fruitful results.
Referring to her transit in the US, she added: “Taiwan’s resolve to safeguard freedom and democracy have received support from our fellow democracy partner, and have solidified our friendship with them.”