U.S. President Donald Trump refused to comment Wednesday on whether the United States would allow China to take Taiwan by force. I never comment on that, he said during a White House Cabinet meeting,
Former White House chief information officer Theresa Payton joined 'Fox & Friends First' to discuss why she considers the investment a 'slam dunk' against China and her take on DOGE's 'pulse check' productivity email.
President Donald Trump on Wednesday declined to comment in response to a question about whether the United States would ever allow China to take control of Taiwan by force. "I never comment on that," Trump said at the White House.
C. C. Wei, recently announced a US$100 billion expansion investment at the White House, drawing significant attention. To clarify the situation, Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te held a press conference with Wei on the evening of the 6th at the Presidential Office to explain the entire process and the background of TSMC's investment decisions.
Chairman C.C. Wei met with US President Donald Trump at the White House, where both parties announced that TSMC would increase its investment in the United States by at least US$100 billion. The investment includes the construction of three new wafer fabs,
Following C. C. Wei, the chairman and CEO of TSMC, being invited to the White House to announce substantial investments in the US, questions have emerged regarding whether TSMC had previously received verbal approval from Taiwan's high-level government officials for this overseas expansion.
The chief executive of chipmaking giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, C.C. Wei, is set to meet with President Donald Trump on Monday.
The meeting comes as the White House said it is set to announce a more than $100 billion investment in the United States by a chipmaker from Taiwan, amid a push by Trump to encourage investments in American manufacturing.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world’s top producer of AI chips, plans to invest an additional $100 billion in US plants that will boost its chip output on American soil and support President Donald Trump’s goal of increasing domestic manufacturing.
The U.S. is Taiwan's ace in the hole as it faces China's threats, so does Trump's fickle foreign policy fuel concern, or does Taipei have "a better hand"?
A longstanding U.S. policy of strategic ambiguity toward Taiwan has—under Trump—begun to breed anxious uncertainty.
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