
Two small adversaries of Russia and China are swapping notes to survive
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. TAIPEI—In an era of brutal great-power politics, how do lesser powers get by? For this embattled Pacific island, a lifeline comes from landlocked Slavs half a world away. Taiwan and the Czech Republic, living in the shadow of China and Russia, have found common cause when small powers worry about being trampled by bigger rivals.
Of roughly 200 countries and independent territories on Earth, fewer than 10 have significant global sway. The issue is gaining fresh urgency as U.S. foreign policy under President Trump becomes antagonistic.
Many in Taipei see deteriorating U.S.-Ukraine ties as a warning about Washington’s willingness to defend Taiwan in case China—which regards the self-governed island as its own territory—invades. Denmark, pressed by Trump to sell Greenland, is seeking support from European and other allies. Colombia acquiesced to Trump’s tariff threats and agreed to accept U.S.
deportees. The Philippines and other Asian countries worry the U.S. will diminish support in standing up to China.
“It’s about how small countries survive," said Jakub Janda, a Czech international-security specialist who runs the first European think tank in Taiwan, the Prague-based European Values Center for Security Policy. Diplomats and business people say the Prague-Taipei friendship—which involves cooperation in intelligence, trade and investment—helps both sides. For Taiwan, which Beijing works to isolate internationally, Czechs offer a welcome link to the world—even though the two don’t have formal diplomatic relations.
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