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US knew Nauru might cut ties to Taiwan before it did so, State Department official says

  • Daniel Kritenbrink, an assistant secretary of state, tells Senate hearing ‘we had known for some time [of Nauru’s concerns] … in this instance, they decided to flip’
  • Aid for the Pacific islands region, a battleground for influence between Beijing and Washington, is part of a US$4 billion budget request for Indo-Pacific strategy

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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi (right) and his Nauru counterpart Lionel Aingimea shake hands after signing the joint communique on the resumption of diplomatic relations between China and Nauru in Beijing on January 24. Photo: AP
Khushboo Razdanin Washington

A top US State Department official has acknowledged that the US was aware that the Pacific island nation of Nauru was weighing whether to switch its diplomatic ties from Taiwan to mainland China before it formally did so in January, and sought to counter the move.

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“We had known for some time that there were concerns in Nauru and we were working with partners to meet those,” Daniel Kritenbrink, assistant secretary for East Asian and Pacific affairs, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at a hearing on Thursday about US strategies for the Pacific islands.

“But in this instance, they decided to flip,” he added.

Emphasising that the “recognition question” was a sovereign decision, he advised Taiwan’s three remaining Pacific partners – Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands and Palau – to be “careful and clear-eyed about entering in these arrangements with China”.

Daniel Kritenbrink, assistant US secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs. Photo: AP
Daniel Kritenbrink, assistant US secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs. Photo: AP

“China often makes many promises that remain unfulfilled, and that can have negative consequences,” Kritenbrink warned, adding that Washington was working “very carefully and closely” with the three nations to make sure their “needs are met”.

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