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US-China tensions loom over Taiwan
By John Chan
5 December 2003
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Despite official statements from both sides that relations
are the best in 30 years, tensions between the US and China are
escalating following renewed controversy over the status of Taiwan.
In recent weeks, China has repeatedly warned that the
use of force may be unavoidable if Taiwanese President Chen
Shui-bian and his pro-independence allies hold a referendum to
declare the island a separate nation-state. Under the internationally
accepted One China policy, Taiwan is formally considered
a province of China and excluded from the United Nations and diplomatic
recognition.
Chinas threats come in response to Chens pledges,
in the lead-up to next years presidential election, to change
Taiwans constitution. It still defines the island as part
of the Republic of China (ROC), which was overthrown on the mainland
by Mao Zedongs forces in 1949.
Chen Shui-bian told a visiting US delegation on November 10
that if re-elected he would hold a referendum on a new constitution
to define Taiwan as a distinct nation-state on December 10, 2006
and implement it on May 20, 2008. In early November, Taiwans
deputy defence minister Chen Chao-min declared the government
would be prepared to fight a war to create a new nation.
The Singapore-based Strait Times reported claims on
November 21 that the Chinese military was on the verge of entering
a pre-mobilisation phrase, including the deployment
of two cruise missile brigades capable of attacking any US aircraft
carrier battle groups that attempted to intervene in a war between
China and Taiwan. During tensions between China and Taiwan in
1996, the Clinton administration deployed two aircraft carriers
into the Taiwan Strait.
Although the Bush administration has officially stated that
it will not support Taiwans independence, China
sees the prospect of US backing for the Taiwanese nationalists
as a serious threat. In an interview with the Washington Post
on November 22, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao urged Washington not
to send any wrong signals to Chen Shui-bian. The
US side must be crystal clear in opposing the use of a referendum
or writing a constitution or all the other tactics used by the
leader of the Taiwan authorities to pursue his separatist agenda,
he said.
The November 27 issue of the state-controlled China Daily
criticised US policy toward Taiwan as being ambiguous and declared
that it serves to encourage the islands separatists
and jeopardise the one-China policy as well as the political foundation
of Sino-US relations.
Chinas rhetoric toned down somewhat after November 29,
when a bill to allow the holding of referenda in Taiwan was heavily
amended by the two pro-China unification parties in the parliament,
the Nationalist Party or Kuomintang (KMT), and the Peoples
First Party (PFP). The amendments prohibited holding a referendum
to alter Taiwans name from the Republic of China, or to
change its flag, territory or national anthem. A defensive
referendum on such issues would only be possible if Taiwan
is facing an external threat or war.
Chen Shui-bian has nevertheless made clear his intention to
aggressively push his agenda and run the risk of a confrontation.
On November 30, he declared that Chinas possession of hundreds
of missiles that can hit Taiwan was justification in itself for
holding a referendum that redefined the islands status.
Addressing a rally of his Democratic Progressive Party, Chen
declared: On March 20 next year, we can hold a referendum
to safeguard national sovereignty, to defend national security....
Facing an external threat is present tense for Taiwan, the countrys
sovereignty may [therefore] be altered any time.... If we wait
until the Communists attack, it will be too late. There will be
no need to hold a referendum.
Chens statements reflect his administrations short-term
electoral calculations. Trailing in the polls behind the pro-unification
parties, he is sending out clear indications he intends to provoke
Beijing and win support on the basis of defying Chinese military
threats. He and other Taiwanese nationalists are calculating that
the Bush administration will come to Taiwans assistance
in the event of any military conflict.
US-China relations
Bush came to power in 2001 after identifying China during his
campaign as a strategic competitor of the US in the
Asia-Pacific. In April 2001, relations between Washington and
Beijing plummeted following the collision of a Chinese jet fighter
and a US spy plane violating Chinese airspace. Amid the controversy,
the White House announced unprecedented arms sales to Taiwan and
Bush declared in a television interview that the US would do whatever
it took to help Taiwan defend herself against a Chinese
attack.
Relations improved after the September 11 terror attacks. Economically
dependent upon access to American markets and investment, Beijing
saw supporting the US war on terror as an opportunity
to lessen the tensions and ingratiate itself, however temporarily,
with Washington.
The Asia Times commented on November 18: Chinas
full cooperation with the US on issues of anti-terrorism and the
North Korean nuclear crisis has helped the country win lots of
benefits in regional security, bilateral trade, suppression of
Taiwan separatism, stabilising Xinjiang [the resource-rich western
Muslim-populated province of China] and the like. As to divergences
such as revaluing its currency or dealing with its trade surplus,
China regards them as economic issues only, instead of extending
them to politics, which could easily provoke domestic anti-US
sentiments.
The global eruption of US militarism, however, and Chinas
own efforts to develop its diplomatic weight on the world arena,
has sown the seeds of conflict.
During his visit to Australia in October, which coincided with
a trip by Chinese President Hu Jintao, Bush declared that the
US expected Australia, Japan, and other Southeast Asian countries
to help keep peace in the Taiwan Strait. Pointedly,
he did not mention China. The exclusion was interpreted in Beijing
and elsewhere as suggesting that China was the threat to the peace.
Bush made his remarks in Canberra after Hu Jintao signed a
strategic partnership with the Association of South
East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Bangkok, expanding Chinas
trade and political relations in the region. As China becomes
the biggest export market for the regions economies, concern
is burgeoning in Washington over Beijings competition for
influence in East Asia.
A comment in the November issue of the New York-based Foreign
Affairs magazine warned that Beijings new foreign policy
of engagement was not necessarily compatible with
US world dominance.
Americans should always remember, however, that even
as China becomes more engaged, it is also growing more adept at
using its foreign policy and foreign relations to serve Chinese
interests. Todays China is certainly more sophisticatedbut
not necessarily kinder or gentler. Beijings new skills may
at times frustrate Washingtons objectives, as China is becoming
better positioned to undermine, and potentially challenge, the
policies of the United States and its allies....
While Beijing currently seems prepared to work within
international rules and norms to pursue its interests, China is
dissatisfied with some aspects of this system, such as US preponderance
and especially the status of Taiwan.
The fragility of US-China relations have been underscored by
the US imposition of trade sanctions against Chinas exports
in November. Under pressure from American manufacturers and union
officials, Bush imposed harsher quotas on Chinese textiles on
November 18, followed six days later by a 46 percent tariff on
Chinese colour televisions. Beijing retaliated by cancelling plans
to buy wheat and other grains from the US.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao is scheduled to visit the US next
week. Alongside talks on the trade disputes, it is expected that
China will seek a guarantee that the Bush administration will
not intervene if tensions escalate with Taiwan. It is unlikely,
however, that Bush will provide such assurances.
As a result, the next three months leading up to the Taiwanese
presidential election are shaping up as a volatile and unpredictable
period in East Asia.
See Also:
Taiwans president outlines
pro-independence election strategy
[6 November 2003]
Taiwanese president
adopts provocative pro-independence stance toward China
[6 November 2002]
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