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Trump administration nixes plans for controversial last-minute foreign trips to Europe and Taiwan

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Washington — The United States called off last-minute trips by top envoys to visit allies in Europe and Taiwan on Tuesday in a sudden diplomatic turnaround in the chaotic final days of the Trump administration. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had been due to make a final official visit to Europe while Kelly Craft, Washington's U.N. envoy, was set to land in Taiwan on Wednesday afternoon.

But the visits were suddenly scrapped a week before Democrat Joe Biden takes office and as President Donald Trump faces an all-but-certain second impeachment on a charge of inciting his supporters to storm Congress last week.

The U-turn encapsulates the turbulent transition period that has enveloped Washington since Biden's November election victory. 

But it also allows both Europe and Taiwan to dodge hosting what could have been potentially awkward delegations from an outgoing administration.

"It was very late in the game to be having a visit of this level," Maggie Lewis, an analyst at Seton Hall Law school who is based in Taiwan, told AFP. "It's appropriate to be focusing on the incoming administration instead of the final days of the Trump administration."

Secretary Of State Pompeo Gives His Family Tour Of The White House
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo walks on the grounds of the White House, December 11, 2020 in Washington. Getty

The cancelled trips round off four tumultuous years of foreign policy under Mr. Trump that tested Washington's traditional allies in both Europe and Asia.  

The two-day stay in Europe would have been Pompeo's last foreign trip but the State Department announced he was staying home to ensure a "smooth and orderly" transition. The U.S. Mission to the UN confirmed to CBS News' Pamela Falk that the State Department travel cancellation would include Ambassador Craft's travel to Taiwan.

Pompeo disinvited?

Pompeo's trip was already looking of limited diplomatic value with the Secretary of State not scheduled to meet any top EU officials in Brussels.

In Luxembourg, an official told AFP on condition of anonymity that one leg of Pompeo's trip was cancelled after Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn called Mr. Trump a "criminal" in comments to RTL radio.

Asselborn described Mr. Trump as a "political pyromaniac who must be brought before a court" over last week's attack on the U.S. Capitol by his supporters.

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NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, left, is seen with Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn during a round table meeting of the North Atlantic Council at NATO headquarters in Brussels, in a December 1, 2015 file photo. AP/Virginia Mayo

The Reuters news agency, citing anonymous European diplomatic officials, reported Wednesday that Pompeo's visits to both Brussels and Luxembourg were called off after Asselborn and EU officials refused to schedule meetings with the top American diplomat.

Pompeo had been scheduled to meet in Brussels with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, over dinner on Wednesday, and then to hold a sit-down with Belgian Foreign Minister Sophie Wilmes.  

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Pompeo has remained staunchly loyal to Mr. Trump despite resignations from a string of his cabinet colleagues and calls to force the president from office over the attack on the Capitol.

High stakes ties with Taiwan

Craft's planned visit to Taiwan came at an acutely perilous time for the self-ruled democracy. Authoritarian China regards Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to seize it one day, by force if necessary.

Beijing's saber-rattling has reached new heights with Chinese jets making a record 380 incursions into Taiwan's defense zone last year to signal anger over Washington's burgeoning relationship with Taipei during the Trump years.

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The stakes are high. A wrong move in the Taiwan Strait could spark conflict between two economic, nuclear-armed superpowers, something the Biden administration will need to grapple with.

The U.S. switched diplomatic recognition to Beijing in 1979 but it remains Taipei's leading unofficial ally and is bound by Congress to sell the island weapons to defend itself.

As Mr. Trump feuded with China on a host of issues, from the coronavirus to trade and national security, Taipei became a way to poke Beijing in the eye.

During his tenure, Mr. Trump signed off on some $18 billion in big-ticket arms deals for Taiwan and ramped up the frequency of official visits, including sending a cabinet official last year, the highest-level delegation since 1979.

Then on Sunday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared he was lifting "complex internal restrictions" limiting official contacts with Taiwan. Beijing promptly warned Washington would "receive a resolute counterstrike from China" over the move and "pay a heavy price" if Craft visited.

CBS News exclusive interview with U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Kelly Craft 03:50

Protecting Taiwan, one of Asia's most progressive democracies, from a Chinese invasion has become a rare bipartisan issue in Washington.

But Biden, who favors a far less confrontational diplomatic style than Mr. Trump, has given few details on what his Taiwan policy might be.

Bonnie Glaser, an expert on Taiwan and China at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Taipei would be "disappointed, but also somewhat relieved" by Craft's last-minute cancellation.

"Taiwan doesn't want to create friction with the incoming administration," she told AFP.

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