The EU may start putting Europeans on Australian patrols in the Asia-Pacific region.
Camera IconThe EU may start putting Europeans on Australian patrols in the Asia-Pacific region. Credit: EPA

EU eyes Taiwan trade in Indo-Pacific plan

Robin EmmottAAP

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The European Union has set out a formal strategy to boost its presence in the Indo-Pacific region and counter China's rising power, pledging to seek a trade deal with Taiwan and to deploy more ships to keep open sea routes.

The EU's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell insisted the strategy was also open to China, particularly in areas such as climate change, but diplomats told Reuters that deeper ties with India, Japan, Australia and Taiwan were aimed at limiting China's power.

Borrell also said an agreement between the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom to establish a security partnership for the Indo-Pacific, in which the EU was not consulted, showed the need for a more assertive foreign policy.

He said the EU was eager to work with the UK on security but that the former member had shown no interest since it left the bloc, expressing regret that Australia had cancelled a submarine deal with France.

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"We must survive on our own, as others do," Borrell said as he presented a new EU strategy for the Indo-Pacific region, talking of the "strategic autonomy" that French President Emmanuel Macron has championed.

"I understand the extent to which the French government must be disappointed," he said.

The EU's chairman, Charles Michel, said the US accord with Australia and the UK "further demonstrates the need for a common EU approach in a region of strategic interest".

Following an initial plan in April, the EU set out seven areas in which it would increase influence in the Indo-Pacific in health, security, data, infrastructure, the environment, trade and oceans.

The plan may mean a higher EU diplomatic profile on Indo-Pacific issues, more EU personnel and investment in the region and a security presence such as dispatching ships through the South China Sea or putting Europeans on Australian patrols.

"Given the importance of a meaningful European naval presence in the Indo-Pacific, the EU will explore ways to ensure enhanced naval deployments by its member states in the region," the document said.

Trade talks with Taiwan are likely to further irritate China, the EU's second-largest trading partner after Lithuania deepened ties with the island.

China considers fiercely democratic, self-ruled Taiwan part of "One China," to be united with the mainland eventually and is regularly angered by any moves which suggest the island is a separate country.