Taiwan's opposition leader seeks to win friends in China with a high-stakes visit

TAIPEI, Taiwan — A few weeks before PresidentDonald Trumparrives inChinanext month, Chinese PresidentXi Jinpingwill have another visitor: Taiwan's opposition leader.

NBC Universal

When Cheng Li-wun, chairperson of Taiwan's Nationalist Party, touches down in China on Tuesday, it will mark the first time in a decade that the head of her party visits the mainland.

It will also be a defining step for Cheng, 56, who took the reins of the party — also known as the Kuomintang or KMT — in November, in a political about-face that has made her a divisive figure in Taiwan, a self-ruling democracy that rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims.

Her view is that the island of 23 million people urgently needs to engage with China to avoid war, and that people should "be able to proudly and confidently say, 'I am Chinese.'"

The KMT has traditionally kept warm ties with Beijing. Yet Cheng's push to embrace China is a major pivot from the views she held when she entered politics in the late 1980s and early 1990s, as a vocal student activist urging Taiwan's independence.

Back then, Cheng was known for her criticism of the KMT, which ruled Taiwan under martial law until 1987. Now, as party leader, she is taking a deliberate turn toward China, even as itramps up military and other pressure on the island.

"The world views the Taiwan Strait as the most severe and dangerous powder keg," Cheng told NBC News in an exclusive interview at the party's headquarters in central Taipei. "Both sides of the Taiwan Strait should do their best to use peaceful means to stabilize the situation."

"It should not be a life-and-death struggle," she said.

Like other Chinese leaders before him, Xi has pressed to "unify" Taiwan with the mainland, by force if necessary, and objected toarms sales to the islandby the United States, which has no formal ties with Taiwan but is its most important international backer. The deals are a major flashpoint in U.S.-China relations and are likely to top the agenda whenXi hosts Trump in Beijingon May 14 and 15.

TAIWAN-POLITICS-DEFENCE (I-Hwa Cheng / AFP via Getty Images)

The timing of Xi's invitation to Cheng to meet with him weeks before Trump is no coincidence: In Taiwan, Cheng's opposition to a proposed$40 billion increase in defense spendingover the next eight years by PresidentLai Ching-tehas stalled approval of the government's budget.

The delay could jeopardize a $14 billion U.S. arms package that was already put on hold by the Trump administration to not irritate Xi before the May summit.

A spokesperson for Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council said Thursday that, by "summoning" Cheng, Xi was "attempting to sever Taiwan's military procurement from the United States."

While the government of Taiwan, formally known as the Republic of China, supports "healthy and orderly cross-strait exchanges," it hopes Cheng "will firmly demand that Beijing face the reality of the Republic of China's existence and immediately stop sending military aircraft around Taiwan," spokesperson Liang Wen-chieh said.

Cheng has said that her position on U.S. arms and Taiwan's defense spending should not be interpreted as being "anti-American."

"For me, improving our relationship with mainland China will never compromise our relationship with the U.S. They are not a zero-sum, 'either-or' choice," she said.

News of Cheng's visit to China next week was swirling as a bipartisan U.S. Senate delegation arrived in Taipei to urge lawmakers to break their logjam over the spending increase and ease concerns in Washington about the island's ability to defend itself.

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TAIWAN-DEFENCE (I-Hwa Cheng / AFP via Getty Images file)

"Those capabilities, as we look at the potential threat and the challenges ahead, require a certain level of capability and technological expertise that are going to cost," Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., told reporters Wednesday.

Cheng has said Taiwan cannot afford to overspend on defense, especially with backlogs of arms orders that the U.S. has still not delivered. She also accused Lai, who is reviled by Beijing as a "separatist," of concealing information about how the money will be allocated and spent.

"In Taiwan, we must do everything in our power to prevent a war in the Taiwan Strait," she said.

Lai has warned that opposition delays to defense spending could compromise Taiwan's national security and give the wrong impression to the international community about the island's determination to defend itself, saying in February that "short-changing Taiwan's defence to kowtow to the CCP is playing with fire."

It is unclear how Cheng's outward embrace of China sits with Taiwanese voters, who have elected Lai's Democratic Progressive Party in thepast three presidential elections. Since Trump's return to the White House, there is less confidence among the public that the U.S. will come to Taiwan's aid in the event of a military conflict, polls show.

Taiwanese Military Exercise At Xinshe Facility (An Rong Xu / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

"One of the biggest concerns is that people here think that trying to have a stronger relationship with the United States is either a waste of time or bad for Taiwan," said Lev Nachman, a professor at Taiwan National University in Taipei.

China welcoming Cheng before Trump's trade-focused summit with Xi is also rich in optics. It shows that the Chinese leadership is willing to speak with high-level Taiwanese officials, and that Beijing indeed has a friend in Taipei.

Xi may also seek to capitalize on what some observers see as Trump's ambivalence toward the norms the U.S. has long set around Taiwan. In February, when Trump was asked by a reporter if he would soon send more weapons to Taiwan after Xiwarned him against it in a phone call, Trump replied, "I'm talking to him about it. We had a good conversation, and we'll make a determination pretty soon."

President Donald Trump talks to China's President Xi Jinping after their talks at the Gimhae Air Base in Busan, South Korea, on October 30, 2025. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP - Getty Images file)

That set off alarm bells with experts who say such a conversation would violate U.S. policy on Taiwan, dating back to the Reagan administration, that prohibits any consultation with Beijing on Taiwan arms sales.

"We should not be negotiating this with the government in Beijing," said Nicholas Burns, a former U.S. ambassador to China under President Joe Biden who is now at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

"If the administration is going to go back on that or contradict it, I think it's going to be extremely worrisome for everyone in the United States who wants to make sure that we continue to help Taiwan become a tougher nut to crack."

Cheng has said she is promoting peace and reconciliation at a moment of global turbulence.

"People do not want to see Taiwan become the next Ukraine," said Cheng, who did not say whether she shares Xi's goal of "unification."

"It's very crucial and important for us to have solid U.S. support for Taiwan," she said, adding that a trip to the U.S. is in the works for later this year.

But first, Cheng is preparing for the most consequential meeting of her political lifetime.

"The sooner, the better," she said with a smile.

Taiwan's opposition leader seeks to win friends in China with a high-stakes visit

TAIPEI, Taiwan — A few weeks before PresidentDonald Trumparrives inChinanext month, Chinese PresidentXi Jinpingwill have ...
Trump's go-it-alone certainty confronts the uncertainties of war

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trumpdid not equivocatein his first live address to Americans about the war in Iran.

Associated Press President Donald Trump arrives from the Blue Room to speak about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool) President Donald Trump arrives to speak about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool) President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool) President Donald Trump conclude his speech about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)

APTOPIX Trump Iran US

"We've beaten and completely decimated Iran," hesaid in a prime-time speechfrom the White House on Wednesday. "They are decimated both militarily and economically and in every other way."

He added: "Their radar is 100% annihilated. We are unstoppable as a military force."

His certitude is now colliding with the uncertainty of war.

The American fighter jet that was shot down in Iran on Friday was a searing reminder of the dangers associated with war, prompting a search operation thatresulted in the rescueof one crew member.Another U.S. aircraftwas hit by Iranian air defenses, Iranian state media reported, days after Trump said Iran had "no anti-aircraft equipment."

For the Republican president, who did not appear in public Friday, the developments were the latest example of his triumphal characterization of the war appearing misplaced.

He has expressed surprise at Iran's moves to strike its Gulf neighbors. He has struggled to respond to Iran's move largely shuttering theStrait of Hormuz, disrupting global oil supplies and sendingpump prices soaringin the United States. His overtures to world leaders to help him reopen the vital waterway have been rebuffed, with some allieswaiting for the fighting to endbefore addressing that situation and others openly critical of a war that Trump chose to initiate.

Trump has long relied on unyielding self-confidence to propel him through the worlds of business and politics, boasting during the 2016 campaign that "I alone can fix it." That has often translated into a go-it-alone approach where only Trump has the answers in a chaotic world and dysfunctional Washington. This view of the presidency has justified his executive orders at home and tariffs that affect the global economy.

But the war with Iran, which he undertook alongside Israel and without consulting other allies or Congress, has provided a test like almost nothing before. For Trump, it is no longer "America First" but America alone, and he is the principal.

"You can be the most assertive, aggressive president in the world but you don't control what happens overseas," said Julian Zelizer, a history professor at Princeton University.

Some traditional allies speak out

As the war enters its sixth week, that reality is becoming more apparent. Trump spent most of the first year of his second term using trade penalties as a weapon that would force other countries to bend to his will. Today, in a time of war, some traditional American allies are becoming more outspoken.

French PresidentEmmanuel Macronsaid this week that the United States "can hardly complain afterward that they are not being supported in an operation they chose to undertake alone."

"This is not our operation," he said.

British Prime MinisterKeir Starmerhas not budged from his refusal to be drawn into the war despite fierce criticism by Trump. France and the United Kingdom are leading efforts to reopen the strait once the fighting ends.

At home, even some of Trump's fellow Republicans are reinforcing the need to maintain strong international relationships. After the president threatened to withdraw from NATO this week, Senate Majority LeaderJohn Thune, R-S.D., said there were not enough votes in the Senate to support that.

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"We got an awful lot of people who think that NATO is a very critical, incredibly successful post-World War II alliance," Thune said of past conversations among Republicans about the move. "I think in the world today, you need allies."

Trump made no mention of leaving NATO during his White House address.

John Bolton, a first-term Trump national security adviser who has since become an adversary, said the current administration made a "serious mistake" by not consulting allies before going to war.

"If you don't build your coalition before the war, it's pretty tough to do it while you're in it," said Bolton, who pleaded not guilty last fall to federal charges accusing him of emailing classified information to family members and keeping top secret documents at his Maryland home.

But he also cautioned European leaders against reflexively opposing Trump out of frustration with his lack of consultation. That, Bolton said, would be "juvenile and petulant."

Trump on his own terms

Trump's penchant to work on his own terms is not limited to the war.

Just this week, he said congressional approval of a ballroom he wants to build at the White House is "not necessary" despite a judge's ruling. He signed an executive order to create a nationwide list of verified eligible voters and to restrict mail-in voting.

In a first for a sitting president, heappeared in the courtroomof the Supreme Court as his administration tried to defend an executive order restricting birthright citizenship.

But as with the war, Trump's go-it-alone strategy at home is also confronting limits.

The Supreme Court struck down his far-reaching tariff program. Democratsquickly challengedhis voting executive order in court and, despite his courtroom presence, the justicesseemed skepticalof his bid to dismantle the Constitution's provisions providing birthright citizenship.

Then there is the uncertainty about the ballroom.

During private comments at an Easter lunch at the White House this week, Trump — ever the builder — seemed to lament the constraints on his job.

"I'm such a king I can't get a ballroom approved," he said to laughter from an audience that included Cabinet members and religious leaders. "I'm doing a lot. But I could be doing a lot more if I was a king."

Associated Press writers Sylvie Corbet in Paris and Joey Cappelletti contributed to this report.

Trump's go-it-alone certainty confronts the uncertainties of war

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trumpdid not equivocatein his first live address to Americans about the war in Iran. ...
UK police investigate after officers left guns outside mayor's home

LONDON (AP) — London police are urgently investigating how armed protection officers guardingMayor Sadiq Khanleft a bag of guns outside his home.

Associated Press

The Metropolitan Police said in a statement late Friday that five officers had been removed from front-line duties while inquiries were being carried out.

The weapons cache, which according to The Sun newspaper included an MP5 semiautomatic Heckler & Koch ­carbine, a Glock pistol, Taser and ammunition, were found in south London Tuesday by a couple, who then informed the Metropolitan Police.

Scaffolder Jordan Griffiths told the newspaper that his girlfriend found the bag by the curbside and said that he was in "shock" after discovering what was inside.

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"I could not believe my eyes and took some pictures as proof of what we had found," he said. "I called the police and told them what I had found and within a few minutes they turned up to collect the guns."

The police Directorate of Professional Standards is reviewing what happened and confirmed that five officers have been removed from front-line duties.

"We are urgently reviewing the circumstances of this incident and recognize the concern it may cause," it said in a statement. "At this stage it is believed the bag was misplaced by on-duty officers a short time before the member of the public located it."

A spokesperson for the mayor said the police "must now take all steps to ensure an incident like this never occurs again."

UK police investigate after officers left guns outside mayor’s home

LONDON (AP) — London police are urgently investigating how armed protection officers guardingMayor Sadiq Khanleft a bag o...
Appeals court confirms prison sentences for 3 ex-Grenoble rugby players for rape

ANGOULEME, France (AP) — Three former Grenoble rugby players serving time for the rape of a 20-year-old student in 2017 have lost an appeal against their convictions and prison sentences.

Associated Press

An appeals court in France on Saturday re-imposed the original sentences of prison terms up to 14 years.

Irishman Denis Coulson and Frenchman Loïck Jammes were sentenced to 14 years in prison, and New Zealand's Rory Grice to 12 years.

The victim had lodged a complaint in March 2017 following Grenoble's match in the southwestern French city of Bordeaux. According to French media reports, she said she had met the players during an alcohol-fueled night and was raped in a hotel in the outskirts of Bordeaux.

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A court sentenced the men to prison in December 2024, and all three have been in prison since. They claimed that the sexual encounter had been consensual.

"To reach the same decision as in the first instance, the court and the jurors took into account the seriousness of the facts," said the court presiding judge, Marie-Dominique Boulard-Paoloni, as quoted by L'Equipe newspaper. "We also considered the absence of any notable change compared to the previous decision. You now have ten days to lodge an appeal in cassation."

Lawyers for the defendants said they would appeal to the Court of Cassation, France's highest court of the judicial order.

AP rugby:https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

Appeals court confirms prison sentences for 3 ex-Grenoble rugby players for rape

ANGOULEME, France (AP) — Three former Grenoble rugby players serving time for the rape of a 20-year-old student in 2017 h...
NBA Star Luka Dončić Suffers Season-Ending Injury amid Custody Battle with Ex-Fiancée Anamaria Goltes

Los Angeles Lakers star Luka Dončić is out for the remainder of the season

People Luka DončićCredit: Sean M. Haffey/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Dončić suffered a grade 2 left hamstring strain during the Lakers' game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday, April 2

  • The injury comes amid an ongoing custody battle for his children — daughters Gabriela, 2, and Olivia, 3 months — whom he shares with ex-fiancée Anamaria Goltes

Los Angeles Lakers starLuka Dončićis out for the remainder of the season.

On Friday, April 3, the team confirmed that Dončić, 27, suffered a grade 2 left hamstring strain during the third quarter of the Lakers' game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday, according toESPNand theNBA.

This type of injury usually requires at least a month of recovery, but the Lakers have not yet commented on the exact timeline Dončić will need, the outlets reported. NBA Playoffs are set to begin on April 18, with Dončić out for this period.

Luka DončićCredit: Cooper Neill/Getty

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Bill Duffy of WME Basketball told ESPN that he plans to apply for an "Extraordinary Circumstances Challenge" on behalf of his client, Dončić, to be eligible for end-of-season awards.

Dončić's injury comes just days after he accused his ex-fiancée, Anamaria Goltes, of filing for child support for their two kids in the wrong place to receive more money.

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In documents previously obtained byPEOPLE, the NBA star filed a motion to dismiss Goltes' petition for child support, which she filed in Los Angeles.

Dončić claimed that the petition was invalid since he, Goltes and their two kids —daughters Gabriela, 2, and Olivia, 3 months— are not California residents, but rather spend most of their time abroad in Slovenia.

Dončić previously filed a family law motion in Slovenia in February. He claims that Goltes knew about the case in Slovenia when she filed in California to "avail herself of the generous amounts of child support for which California is well-known."

"Luka has always provided for anything his daughters could need or want and will continue to do so," a spokesperson for Dončić said in a statement to PEOPLE on March 24. "He will always fight to be with his daughters and give them the best life possible.

"Luka is seeking dismissal of this case simply because Slovenia, not California, is the appropriate forum for adjudication of this dispute," the statement concluded.

Read the original article onPeople

NBA Star Luka Dončić Suffers Season-Ending Injury amid Custody Battle with Ex-Fiancée Anamaria Goltes

Los Angeles Lakers star Luka Dončić is out for the remainder of the season NEED TO KNOW Dončić suffered a grad...
Trippier 'emotional' after Newcastle announces he'll leave at end of the season

NEWCASTLE, England (AP) — Former England right back Kieran Trippier will leave Newcastle at the end of the season when his contract expires, the Premier League club announced Saturday.

Associated Press Newcastle's Kieran Trippier controls the ball during the Champions League round of 16 first leg soccer match between Newcastle United and Barcelona in Newcastle , England, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Super) Newcastle's Kieran Trippier speaks to referee Marco Guida after the Champions League round of 16 first leg soccer match between Newcastle United and Barcelona in Newcastle , England, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Britain Champions League Soccer

The 35-year-old defender joined from Atlético Madrid in January 2022 as a marquee signing soon after the northeast club, then in the relegation zone, wasboughtby Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund.

Trippier has made more than 150 appearances Newcastle — scoring four goals — during his four-and-a-half-year spell at St James' Park, helping the teamwin the English League Cupfor its first major trophy in 70 years and also qualify for the Champions League twice in the last three years.

"This is where I have felt most at home," Trippier said. "It's emotional, and I'm really going to miss it."

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Newcastle manager Eddie Howe said Trippier "has helped to drive standards that have changed the club's trajectory."

"His leadership skills have been invaluable," Howe said. "In difficult moments, his experience has proved calming and his drive and will to win has inspired the players to keep pushing forward."

Newcastle has seven games left this season, all in the Premier League.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Trippier 'emotional' after Newcastle announces he'll leave at end of the season

NEWCASTLE, England (AP) — Former England right back Kieran Trippier will leave Newcastle at the end of the season when hi...
Photo Credit: Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for Kylie Cosmetics

Khloe Kardashianwore a cropped jacket over a fitted crop top for Fabletics. The look perfectly blended leisure with athleisure, and captured the reality TV star's fashion-forward style. The crop top featured a deep neckline and a sleeveless design. She layered it with a matching jacket and bottoms for a monochromatic look.

Khloe Kardashian keeps it chic in cropped jacket over fitted crop top and leggings for Fabletics

Check outKhloe Kardashian'slatest look for Fabletics:

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The Good American founder exuded relaxed vibes in a new post for Fabletics. She wore a black crop top that fit her like a glove and featured a deep neckline. The fashion mogul paired it with a matching jacket with white stripes on the sleeves to keep the look understated yet stylish.

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The postKhloe Kardashian Layers Cropped Jacket Over Fitted Crop Top for Fableticsappeared first onReality Tea.

Khloe Kardashian Layers Cropped Jacket Over Fitted Crop Top for Fabletics

Khloe Kardashianwore a cropped jacket over a fitted crop top for Fabletics. The look perfectly blended leisure with athleisure, and capture...

 

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