‘On a Tightrope’: How Taiwan’s President Navigated the U.S. and China
Known for her quiet pragmatism, Tsai Ing-wen has ushered in a new era of American cooperation as worries about Chinese aggression rise.In an island renowned for boisterous politics, Taiwan’s president, Tsai Ing-wen, is an improbable leader.
Described by those close to her as scholarly and bookish, Ms. Tsai is known for caution and understatement. In 2016, she ordered her staff to stay silent about a call with incoming President Donald J. Trump, even though it was the first time in decades a Taiwanese leader had spoken to an American president or president-elect. (Mr. Trump was less discreet.)
When she rose to lead her party 15 years ago, she was known as a technocrat, not a transformative politician. “Many commentators view Tsai as a transitional and relatively weak leader,” noted a U.S. diplomatic cable at the time assessing her place in Taiwanese politics.
As Ms. Tsai, 66, makes one of her final visits before leaving office next year after two terms, she does so as one of the most important leaders in the world. Sitting at the center of the yawning divide between China and the United States, she has steered Taiwan between the contradictory demands of the world’s two most powerful countries, one that claims the island under its authoritarian rule and another that views the democracy as one prong in a broader confrontation with China.
Ms. Tsai’s visit this week, including an expected meeting with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, is not about diplomatic breakthroughs, but about solidifying Taiwan’s status in the minds of U.S. leaders amid significant geopolitical uncertainty.
“She has earned a place in the eyes of Americans, but also other parts of the world, as being a reliable interlocutor. It is very hard for China’s propaganda machine to paint her as some kind of maniacal attack robot on all things China,” said Steve Yates, chair of the China Policy Initiative at the America First Policy Institute.
As president, Ms. Tsai has developed the closest relations with the United States that Taiwan has had since it became a full democracy nearly 30 years ago, securing unofficial support along with the promise of weapons. Deepening Taipei-Washington links has created space for other countries not officially recognizing Taiwan’s government to expand their ties, including Japan and some European nations.
This has given the island the best hope for solidifying a defense in the face of increasingly bellicose calls by Beijing to take Taiwan by force. Ms. Tsai has also worked to push back against China without openly confronting the economic and military giant just 100 miles across the Taiwan Strait.
Privately, Ms. Tsai has likened the position to “walking on a tightrope,” according to two people who have worked closely with her. For a model, she has looked to the former German chancellor Angela Merkel, who came out of academia, as she did.
Her mass appeal is not what people consider her strength. But her governance, her thinking, her determination and her decision-making are actually the typical characteristics we should see in governing a modern country,” Ms. Tsai said of Ms. Merkel in a TV interview in 2015.