TAIPEI, Taiwan — Republican and Democratic lawmakers made their first trip to Taiwan under the new Trump administration a bipartisan one, aiming to show both Taiwan and China that U.S. support for Taiwan's defense remains broad, despite the harsh words and heightened tariffs President Donald Trump has imposed for the Taiwanese.
Taiwan's leaders, in turn, have assured the Republican U.S. administration that they have taken in Trump's complaints and are acting on them.
Many Asia-Pacific nations are eschewing the retaliatory criticism and tariffs of some of the U.S.'s European allies after Trump earlier this month slapped broad tariffs on many countries around the world, including a 32% one for Taiwan.
Despite that hit, conversations in Taiwan this week were ''optimistic and forward-looking,'' said Democratic Sen. Chris Coons, who was visiting Taipei alongside two Republican senators. ''I'm optimistic that we're going to see a strong next chapter in U.S.-Taiwan relations," he said.
The Taiwanese have said they are working fast to strike new trade and investment deals that suit the Trump administration, on top of the advanced-semiconductor giant's $100 billion investment this year alone in chip production in the U.S..
The U.S. lawmakers also said that Taiwan was taking lessons from Ukraine in its defense against Russia and criticism from Trump, and is investing fast to make their military stronger, nimbler and less dependent on the U.S. as the island's strongest deterrent against China. That includes seeking investment with Americans on drone warfare.
Sens. Pete Ricketts and Coons, the ranking Republican and Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee's East Asia subcommittee, spoke ahead of scheduled talks Friday with President Lai Ching-te, Defense Minister Wellington Koo and national security adviser Joseph Wu. Republican Sen. Ted Budd also is on the trip.
In remarks carried by the official Central News Agency, Lai called for a ''secure and sustainable economic and trade partnership'' between the two sides. That would involve building ''non-red supply chains,'' for manufacturing that exclude Chinese involvement in order to ''meet geopolitical and climate change challenges,'' the agency quoted Lai as saying at the Presidential Office Building.