President-elect Donald Trump seemed to rule out Saturday a meeting with the president of Taiwan when she travels to America next month.
Trump angered China and seemed to upend decades of US policy this month when he took a congratulatory phone call from Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen.
Tsai will transit in Houston January 7-8 as she travels to Central America and stops over in San Francisco January 13-14 on her way home.
Beijing has asked Washington to bar Tsai from flying through US airspace.
Trump, speaking to reporters Saturday at his estate in Florida, was asked if he would meet with Tsai if she stopped in the US. He takes office January 20.
"Stops by here?," Trump said.
"In the United States or in Palm Beach? Nobody's ever mentioned that to me. I'm not meeting with anybody until after January 20th because it's a little bit inappropriate. From a protocol standpoint. But we'll see," Trump said. "We'll see."
Taiwan won't cave to Beijing threats, says president
Taipei (AFP) Dec 31, 2016 - Taiwan will not bend to pressure despite China returning to its "old ways" of intimidation, President Tsai Ing-wen said Saturday, following Beijing's protests over her call to US President-elect Donald Trump.
China has stepped up military drills near Taiwan since the call earlier in December, in a move seen as putting on a show of strength as its ties with the self-ruled island and the United States deteriorate.
The call with Trump upended decades of diplomatic precedent in which Washington has effectively ignored Taipei in favour of Beijing, which considers Taiwan a breakaway province to be brought back within its fold.
In her end-of-year address, Tsai urged calm from Beijing and warned that recent actions by China were affecting cross-strait stability.
"Beijing authorities are returning to their old ways of isolating and suppressing Taiwan, and even of threats and intimidation," Tsai said.
"We hope this is not a policy decision by Beijing," she said. "We won't bend to pressure yet we also won't return to the old path of confrontation."
The Taiwanese leader called on Beijing to resume dialogue to find a "reasonable" solution.
China cut off official communications with Tsai's government after it refused to accept Beijing's interpretation of the "One China" concept.
Taiwan's defence minister warned Tuesday that enemy threats were growing daily after China's aircraft carrier and a flotilla of other warships passed south of the island.
Tsai said Saturday that Taiwan was "sufficiently capable" of handling the challenges and changes it was facing, whether they were national defence or economic issues, and that people should not "overly panic".
The two sides split in 1949 after a civil war but Beijing still claims the self-ruling island as part of its territory and has not ruled out using force to bring about unification.
The Taiwan Strait that separates them has been heavily fortified for decades.
"Whether cross-strait relations can be turned around next year depends on our patience and belief," Tsai told reporters.
Tsai is scheduled to transit through the United States when she travels to Central America in January, stopping in Houston and San Francisco.
Beijing has asked Washington to bar Tsai from flying through its airspace.
She did not confirm whether she would be meeting with any officials in Trump's team during her stopover.
Tsai said diplomatic relations with Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador -- the Central American nations she will visit -- were all "considered stable".
The comment comes amid speculation Taiwan may lose more allies after the small African nation of Sao Tome and Principe cut ties with the island in favour of Beijing in late December.
That leaves Taiwan with formal diplomatic ties to only 21 states, including the Vatican, its highest profile supporter.
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