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Explainer | How Taiwan’s relations with mainland China have changed under president Tsai Ing-wen
- Relationship between Taipei and Beijing has gone from friendly to frosty since 2016, as Washington ties grow warmer
- First milestone in the downward spiral was Tsai’s unprecedented conversation with then president-elect Donald Trump
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Under former president Ma Ying-jeou, Taiwan had a friendly relationship with Beijing but his successor Tsai Ing-wen has taken a harder line against the mainland since she stepped up in 2016.
Tsai, from the independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party, has also fostered warming relations between Washington and Taipei. This has met with increasing hostility from Beijing, whose military strength grows by the day.
China regards the island as a breakaway province, separated due to civil war, and has said it will reunify the island by force if necessary. However, the United States sees the island as a de facto ally and has promised to support its self-defence capability.
Here are some of the key milestones in the cross-strait relationship since Tsai took office.
May 20, 2016: Tsai’s inauguration
Tsai is officially sworn in as Taiwan’s president, succeeding Beijing-friendly Ma Ying-jeou and ending a cordial period between Beijing and Taipei.
December 1, 2016: Tsai calls Trump
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