As Washington prepares for a potentially historic summit between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, Taiwan appears to be taking a back seat in U.S.-China diplomacy. Reports suggest there has been no significant progress toward arranging a direct conversation between Trump and Taiwanese leader Lai Ching-te, with officials reportedly concerned that such contact could disrupt preparations for a Trump-Xi meeting. At the same time, several major U.S. arms packages for Taiwan remain pending approval, including reported Patriot PAC-3 missile interceptors and NASAMS air defense systems. Analysts say Washington may be seeking to avoid steps that could trigger tensions with Beijing while broader U.S.-China engagement remains a priority. The developments have fueled debate over whether Taiwan is being temporarily sidelined as the world's two largest powers work to stabilize relations ahead of a high-stakes diplomatic summit.

There are no signs that the US president is about to phone Lai Ching-te and upset the fragile stability with Beijing, sources say.

As Washington prepares for a potentially historic summit between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, Taiwan appears to be taking a back seat in U.S.-China…