Taiwan pledges chip talks and investment to mollify Trump

Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te speaks at a press conference in Taipei on Feb. 14, 2025, after a security meeting about US President Trump's tariffs on trade partners and semiconductors. (Taiwan Presidential Office via AP)
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Updated 15 February 2025
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Taiwan pledges chip talks and investment to mollify Trump

  • TSMC is investing $65 billion in new factories in the US state of Arizona, a project begun in 2020 under Trump’s first administration.
  • Taiwan is home to the world’s largest contract chipmaker, TSMC, a major supplier to companies including Apple and Nvidia

TAIPEI: Taiwan President Lai Ching-te pledged on Friday to talk with the United States about President Donald Trump’s concerns over the chip industry and to increase US investment and buy more from the country, while also spending more on defense.
Trump spoke critically about Taiwan on Thursday, saying he aimed to restore US manufacturing of semiconductor chips and repeating claims about Taiwan having taken away the industry he wanted back in the United States.
Speaking to reporters after holding a meeting of the National Security Council at the presidential office, Lai said that the global semiconductor supply chain is an ecosystem in which the division of work among various countries is important.
“We of course are aware of President Trump’s concerns,” Lai said.
“Taiwan’s government will communicate and discuss with the semiconductor industry and come up with good strategies. Then we will come up with good proposals and engage in further discussions with the United States,” he added.
Democratic countries including the United States should come together to build a global alliance for AI chips and a “democratic supply chain” for advanced chips, Lai said.
“While admittedly we have the advantage in semiconductors, we also see it as Taiwan’s responsibility to contribute to the prosperity of the international community.”
Taiwan is home to the world’s largest contract chipmaker, TSMC, a major supplier to companies including Apple and Nvidia, and a crucial part of the developing AI industry.
TSMC is investing $65 billion in new factories in the US state of Arizona, a project begun in 2020 under Trump’s first administration.
TSMC’s Taipei-listed shares closed down 2.8 percent on Friday, underperforming the broader market, which ended off 1.1 percent.
A senior Taiwan security official, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity in order to speak more freely, said if TSMC judged it was feasible to increase its US investment, Taiwan’s government would help in talks with the United States.
TSMC declined to comment.
The official added that communications between Taiwan and US economic, security and defense officials at present was “quite good” and “strong support from the United States can be felt.”

US support
The United States, like most countries, has no formal diplomatic ties with Chinese-claimed Taiwan, but is the democratically governed island’s most important international backer and arms supplier.
Trump cheered Taiwan last week after a joint US-Japan statement following Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s visit to Washington called for “maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” and voiced support for “Taiwan’s meaningful participation in international organizations.”
But Taiwan also runs a large trade surplus with the United States, which surged 83 percent last year, with the island’s exports to the US hitting a record $111.4 billion, driven by demand for high-tech products such as semiconductors.
Lai said that the United States is Taiwan’s largest foreign investment destination and that Taiwan is the United States’ most reliable trade partner.
Trump has also previously criticized Taiwan, which faces a growing military threat from China, for not spending enough on defense, a criticism he has made of many US allies.
“Taiwan must demonstrate our determination to defend ourselves,” Lai said, adding his government is working to propose a special budget this year to boost defense spending from 2.5 percent of its GDP to 3 percent.
His government is involved in a standoff with parliament, where opposition parties hold a majority, over cuts to the budget, including defense spending.
“Certainly, more and more friends and allies have expressed concern to us, worried whether Taiwan’s determination for its self-defense has weakened,” Lai said.


Fourth pair of Filipino conjoined twins to undergo separation surgery in Riyadh

Updated 5 sec ago
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Fourth pair of Filipino conjoined twins to undergo separation surgery in Riyadh

  • The Manuel twins and their parents met with the Saudi ambassador to Manila
  • Kingdom’s flagship program for conjoined twins has separated over 140 children 

MANILA: Conjoined twins Olivia and Gianna Manuel will travel to Riyadh for separation surgery, becoming the fourth pair of Filipino twins to be treated under the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program, the Kingdom’s Embassy in Manila said on Tuesday. 

The 20-month-old girls from the town of Talavera in the central Philippine province of Nueva Ecija were born in April 2024. They are joined from the chest to the abdomen, a condition known as omphalopagus. 

Saudi Ambassador Faisal Ibrahim Al-Ghamdi received them on Monday, “ahead of their departure to the Kingdom,” the embassy said in a statement. 

“The family of the twins conveyed their profound gratitude and appreciation to the Government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for this generous gesture and the medical and humanitarian care extended to their daughters.”

Olivia and Gianna’s mother first learned about the Saudi Conjoined Twins Program last year when she was still in the hospital with the girls, closely monitored by doctors for three months after they were born. 

“From the time I gave birth to the twins, I already started searching about conjoined twins,” Ginalyn Manuel told Arab News.

In the beginning, she followed updates on Akhizah and Ayeesha Yusoph, the second pair of Filipino twins to be selected for separation surgery under the program. 

But at the time, she could not find anyone who was able to help connect her to the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center, which runs the conjoined twins initiative. 

“Then in May, I saw the Misa twins. The mother posted that they were about to fly and she was thanking Saudi Arabia and the embassy,” Manuel said. 

Maurice Ann and Klea Misa are the third pair of conjoined twins from Lubang, a municipality on the Philippine island of Mindoro, who flew to Riyadh earlier this year in May for a separation surgery.

Through their social media posts, Manuel tried again to make online connections, eventually finding the right people to link her up with KSrelief. 

“Then in July, (KSrelief) sent us an email asking for the medical records of my twins, and that started the whole process,” she said. 

Conjoined twins are a rare phenomenon, estimated to occur once in every 50,000 to 60,000 births. 

Saudi Arabia is known as a pioneer in the field of separation surgery. KSrelief was established by King Salman in 2015 and is headed by Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, one of the world’s most renowned pediatric surgeons.

Since 1990, he and his team have separated more than 140 children from 27 countries who were born sharing internal organs with their twins.

The Misa twins, who are joined at the head, are currently being prepared for their surgery in Riyadh. 

The first pair of Filipino conjoined twins, Ann and Mae Manzo, were separated under the program in March 2004. They were joined at the abdomen, pelvis and perineum. 

They were followed by the Yusoph twins, who were joined at the lower chest and abdomen and shared one liver. Their successful separation surgery was conducted in September 2024.