Paraguay and Taiwan Enjoy Robust Diplomatic Ties, Says Paraguayan President

.
Switching diplomatic allegiance from Taiwan to China has not brought the economic benefits that some countries have hoped for, the president said.
Paraguay President Santiago Peña said his country enjoys a “strong alliance” with diplomatic ally Taiwan, and countries that have made the diplomatic switch to China have not fared as well as they had initially anticipated.
Paraguay and Taiwan established diplomatic ties in 1957.
Peña pointed to his country’s history, specifically the Paraguayan War that started in 1864, and said that he understood the threat Taiwan faces from the Chinese regime’s influence.
Since the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) came to power in Taiwan in 2016, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been stripping Taiwan of its diplomatic allies and stepping up diplomatic, economic, and military pressure on the self-governing island. The CCP views Taiwan as a breakaway province and labels Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te and his predecessor, Tsai Ing-wen, both DPP members, as “separatists.”
South American countries like Argentina, Brazil, and Peru switched their diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to China in the 1970s.
.
Diplomatic Switch
In the last couple of years, Peña said he had spoken to the leaders of South American countries that made the diplomatic switch from Taiwan to China. According to Peña, the leaders said they felt misled by Beijing’s false promises.“Many of them said, ‘Look, I thought five, ten years ago, that if I was making this [diplomatic] move, my country will be much more developed. And the reality is not that. It’s quite the opposite,’” he said.
Peña explained the leaders had believed that their countries would benefit by tapping into China’s huge market. Instead, they said their diplomatic decisions have exposed their countries to a Chinese manufacturing base that doesn’t abide by the same labor laws, environmental standards, and regulations that their countries abide by.
Now, these countries “are less developed,” Peña said, and “they rely more on manufactured goods from Asia and less on the capacity to create jobs in their own country.”
“So that’s why we have decided to follow a different path, a relatively small country that develops an industrial base [that can manufacture] high-quality products, that [is] able to compete with any country of the world,” he said.
Paraguay–Taiwan Ties
The CCP’s attempt to undermine the Paraguay–Taiwan ties recently came to light. Last month, Paraguay’s foreign ministry canceled the visa of a Chinese diplomat over what it called “interference in internal affairs” for his remarks urging the South American country to switch its diplomatic allegiance to China.Peña traveled to Taiwan in May 2024 to take part in Lai’s inauguration, and the two leaders subsequently held talks.
“We spoke about the fraternal ties that unite our countries and about continuing to work together for the well-being of our nations.”
.