Speaker Nancy Pelosi was expected to arrive in Singapore on Monday, beginning a closely watched tour of Asia that has intensified diplomatic anxiety over whether she might also visit Taiwan, a move that could sharply escalate tensions with China.
Pelosi has declined to confirm whether Taiwan is on her itinerary. The island, a self-governing democracy of about 23 million people, is claimed by China as its territory. A visit by Pelosi would make her the highest-ranking U.S. official to travel there in decades, a prospect that has unsettled officials in both Beijing and Washington.
While remaining silent on specific plans, Pelosi has previously signaled support for Taiwan. Earlier this year, she proposed a visit that was postponed after she contracted Covid-19. More recently, she said it was important for the United States to show backing for Taiwan, without confirming whether that support would include a stop on the island.
On Sunday, Pelosi’s office released partial details of her travel plans, which had largely been kept under wraps for security reasons. According to the statement, she will be accompanied by a small congressional delegation and will visit Singapore, Malaysia, South Korea, and Japan. The trip is intended to focus on regional security, economic cooperation, and democratic governance in the Indo-Pacific.
Pelosi was also scheduled to attend a cocktail reception in Singapore hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce, according to a posting by the group.
The uncertainty surrounding Taiwan has come at a particularly sensitive moment in U.S.-China relations. The Biden administration has grown increasingly concerned that Chinese leader Xi Jinping could consider moving against Taiwan, potentially by force, within the next year or two.
The last House speaker to visit Taiwan was Newt Gingrich in 1997, a trip that took place under far less strained geopolitical conditions. Today, even the suggestion of a similar visit has prompted warnings from Beijing and quiet unease within the U.S. government.
As Pelosi begins her Asia tour in Singapore, attention remains firmly fixed not on where she is going, but on where she might still go.

