Taiwanese Premier Cho Jung-tai visited Japan on Saturday to celebrate the island's World Baseball Classic victory over the Czech Republic. The trip marks the first known planned visit to Japan by a sitting Taiwanese premier since the two sides severed diplomatic ties in 1972. It comes as Sino-Japanese relations remain strained, likely to provoke ire from China.
Taiwanese Premier Cho Jung-tai's visit to Japan was the first known planned trip by a sitting premier from the island since the severance of diplomatic ties in 1972, according to Taiwan's Central News Agency. The purpose was to attend the celebration of Taiwan's victory over the Czech Republic in the World Baseball Classic on Saturday.
For context, in 2004, a flight carrying then-Premier Yu Shyi-kun was diverted to Naha Airport in Okinawa Prefecture, where he stayed for five hours before departing. Unlike that unplanned stopover, this visit was deliberately scheduled, highlighting the informal yet active ties between Japan and Taiwan.
Sino-Japanese relations remain in a deep freeze, and the trip is expected to stoke China's ire. While Japan and Taiwan maintain robust non-diplomatic exchanges, particularly through events like the World Baseball Classic, the geopolitical implications of such high-level visits warrant careful monitoring amid ongoing regional tensions.