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Dual Deterrence: A New Taiwan
Strategy
Logan Wright
After
an extremely narrow reelection victory, Taiwanese
president Chen Shui-bian has revealed his true colors,
indicating he will continue to advance the cause of
Taiwan’s independence. The United States needs to
change its approach toward Taiwan to keep Chen’s agenda
in check and avoid a cross-Strait military conflict.
During
the period immediately before the March 20 election,
debates raged over whether Chen was stoking Taiwanese
nationalism solely to help his electoral chances or out
of genuine conviction to lead Taiwan toward
independence. After his election victory by less than
30,000 votes, and now that he is free of any future
electoral constraints, Chen’s intentions are clear. He
told the Washington Post in
Taipei
on Monday, "The fundamental reason I won this
presidential election . . . is because there is a rising
Taiwan identity and it has been solidified. I think the
Beijing authorities should take heed of this fact and
accept the reality." Chen added, "I think we have
reached an internal consensus that insists upon Taiwan
being an independent, sovereign country."
Chen's
statements reveal that he has misread his electoral
mandate, misread the meaning of sovereignty, and misread
attitudes in Beijing and Washington. The
United
States
has a strongly compelling interest in changing its
approach toward Taiwan to keep Chen from entangling the
United States in a military conflict with China.
Because the United States has become less ambiguous in
its commitment to
Taiwan’s
defense, any use of Chinese military force will probably
provoke an American naval response. Because China will
undoubtedly be the first mover in this action-reaction
cycle, the United States will not be able to decide upon
the timing of the conflict. At stake are thousands of
American lives, the economic prosperity of perhaps the
entire Asia-Pacific region, the enormous volume of
American trade with China and investment in China, and
U.S. strategic cooperation with China on North Korea,
terrorism, and nonproliferation. These stakes are
momentous, but without influence over both Taiwan and
China the United States will have little control over
events.
The
"one China" policy, which acknowledges that Chinese on
both sides of the
Taiwan
Strait
believe there is "one
China,
and that Taiwan is a part of China," has remained the
foundation of U.S.-China relations since it was
negotiated by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger in
1972. After normalization of relations with
China
in 1979, Congress passed the Taiwan Relations Act to
reaffirm
Washington’s
commitment to Taiwanese security. Since 1979, Taiwan
has become a fully democratic polity, and has witnessed
a historic handover of power to Chen's Democratic
Progressive Party. Despite tensions, the "one China"
formula has produced a relatively stable cross-Strait
environment over the past thirty years.
China’s
resolve to reunite Taiwan with the mainland, through
military force if necessary, should not be understated.
The concept of the indivisibility of the Chinese nation
has deep historical roots and contemporary political
implications. Chinese leaders not only fear the domino
effect that the loss of Taiwan could create in Tibet,
Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia, and Hong Kong, but also the
loss of legitimacy for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Few observers of
China
believe the CCP could survive an independent
Taiwan.
For the Chinese leadership, compared to the possibility
of losing power, military action to prevent the loss of
Taiwan is not only possible but probable. Conflict
between the United States and China over Taiwan is not
inevitable. Perceptions of stability are critical to
maintain stability. Beijing is not aiming to reclaim
Taiwan immediately, but to maintain reunification as a
political option. If Beijing perceives that Taiwan’s
leadership will never permit reunification, the Chinese
leadership could conclude that military force is the
only acceptable option.
For
this reason, what Chen Shui-bian says and does, and the
perceptions he creates in Taiwan and on the mainland,
could entangle the
United
States
in a military conflict. While politicians will always
claim a mandate from even the narrowest victories,
Chen’s claim to a mandate to pursue Taiwanese
independence is questionable. Chen won reelection over
the Kuomintang's Lien Chan, who promised a more stable,
less confrontational approach to Beijing, by less than
30,000 votes out of more than 13 million votes cast.
Moreover, a referendum closely associated with Chen,
which called for more defense spending to counter
China's
missile threat and a resumption of dialogue with
China
on a "peace and stability" framework, failed to garner
the 50 percent of voter participation necessary to
validate it under
Taiwan's
Referendum Law. The referendum, which some suspected
Chen of promoting for political purposes, drew a stern
rebuke from President Bush in December 2003. "The
comments and actions made by the leader of Taiwan
indicate that he may be willing to make decisions
unilaterally to change the status quo, which we oppose,"
Bush warned. The wording of the referendum was later
revised to ensure that it did not "change the status
quo," but Chen's insistence on maintaining the
referendum reveals the extent to which it was closely
tied with his political fortunes. Beijing also opposed
the referendum, fearing it would set a precedent for
future referenda on Taiwan’s sovereignty and
independence from China, and the Kuomintang urged their
supporters to boycott the referendum. Because the
referendum’s participation only reached 45 percent, some
of Chen's supporters must have withheld support for the
referendum, most likely to avoid confrontation with
China. The failure of the referendum indicates Taiwan
has a moderate center, including some Chen supporters,
favoring stability and continuity in cross-Strait
relations. This moderate center casts doubt on Chen’s
mandate to pursue activities leading Taiwan toward
status as an "independent, sovereign country."
Despite
the referendum's failure, Chen has insisted that he will
continue to push for additional referenda, including a
controversial proposal to alter Taiwan's constitution in
2006. Taiwan's constitution was drafted in 1947 under
the control of Chiang Kai-shek as the constitution of
the Republic of China, with reclaiming the mainland as a
founding principle. Chen Shui-bian's desire to update
Taiwan’s outdated constitution appears reasonable to
many outside observers, but it alarms both Beijing and
Washington precisely because it undercuts the basis for
the "one
China"
compromise reached in 1972. If the new constitution is
ratified under the name of the "Republic
of
Taiwan,"
Beijing will likely view this action as a violation of
the one-China principle, which would almost certainly
generate a military response.
In the
past, Beijing has held Taiwanese acceptance of "one
China"
as a precondition for resuming dialogue between
Beijing
and
Taipei.
Taiwanese leaders refused, arguing that while they did
not seek independence, they could not surrender
sovereignty before dialogue began. Chen warned Beijing
against doing this again on Monday, indicating that
Taiwan
will respond with a new demand that China recognize
Taiwan as a separate country. "Then, I believe the two
sides will be forever deadlocked, major differences
cannot be solved and it will be impossible for both
sides to sit down and talk. We understand this in our
hearts. So don't raise the 'One China' principle. The
so-called 'one China' does not exist now. Perhaps it
will in the future. We should all be able to sit
together and deal with the future one China issue
together." Inserting a demand for China to recognize
Taiwan as a separate country is not a step toward
dialogue with
Beijing;
it is only a step toward confrontation.
To
prevent entanglement in military conflict, the United
States should actively attempt to minimize Chen
Shui-bian's impact on cross-Strait relations. This new
approach should broadly consist of "dual deterrence," in
which the United States warns Taiwan of the consequences
of moves toward independence, at the same time as
continuing warnings deterring China from employing
military force. If Chen refuses to moderate his
rhetoric and shelve his referenda, the United States
should make gradual, measured reductions in the degree
of U.S.-Taiwan military-to-military cooperation, while
clearly telling the Taiwanese leadership privately of
the reasons for the downgrade. The United States should
make clear to Chen that any of his more controversial
proposals touching upon sovereignty will require U.S.
advice and consent. For example, scenarios exist in
which constitutional reform could proceed, but with
certain sections of the constitution relating to
sovereignty walled off from change, through the
influence of
U.S.
policymakers. If Chen refuses to respond to these
private entreaties, public statements condemning his
moves should follow, preferably in advance of the policy
initiatives, which should limit the measures‚ political
support inside
Taiwan.
Critics may assert that this strategy circumscribes the
authority of Taiwan’s democratic process, but
safeguarding Taiwan‚s democratic development, as well as
protecting all other U.S. interests in Asia, requires
avoiding conflict with China.
While
this approach fits within the contours of the "one
China" policy, it would reflect an additional
U.S.
focus on limiting the pro-independence statements and
actions of Taiwanese politicians. This would have two
salutary effects upon cross-Strait stability. First, it
would convince Chen that the United States is not
unconditionally committed to Taiwan's defense, even
though the U.S. stance is less ambiguous than in the
past. Secondly, it would reassure China that the United
States is actively and publicly opposing Taiwan's
independence, which should forestall immediate Chinese
military action. The United States should try to
convince China that any military action to intimidate
Taiwan
would likely be counterproductive and would stimulate
additional pro-independence sentiment, as it did before
the 1996 and 2000 Taiwanese elections.
With
ongoing military conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, the
United States should seek to manage other regional
crises, such as the
Taiwan
Strait,
before they escalate into military conflict. A policy
of "dual deterrence" would take preventive steps to
minimize the impact of Chen Shui-bian's statements and
actions upon cross-Strait stability, while reducing the
likelihood of a desperate Chinese military reaction.
There may not be enough trust in the U.S.-China
relationship for
China
to believe that the United States might stay out of a
conflict over Taiwan, but there is enough trust for
China to believe that the United States does not want to
be forced to make that choice.
Logan Wright is a
doctoral candidate at George Washington University.
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