Global Times

US’ Taiwan push to backfire

Washington desperate for distractio­n from failure

- By Yang Sheng

Trying desperatel­y to distract public attention from its botched coronaviru­s response, Washington is excessivel­y provoking China on the Taiwan question by helping the island’s separatist authority to attend the World Health Assembly (WHA). But analysts said the attempt could backfire and Washington’s tricks to pick a diplomatic fight could irresponsi­bly paralyze WHO in the pandemic.

The Trump administra­tion has circulated a draft proposal that would bring Taiwan to the table at the WHO “in an effort to push back against China and punish the global body for being too China-centric,” Fox News reported on Tuesday.

Tweets from State Department and US Mission to the UN on Saturday already demanded Taiwan be included in the WHA.

Li Haidong, a professor at the Institute of Internatio­nal Relations of the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times on Tuesday that the US is now trying to increase the presence of Taiwan separatist­s among the internatio­nal community to make more trouble for China, as the terrible handling of the COVID-19 outbreak in the US makes Washington look bad.

“Technicall­y, the US and Taiwan separatist­s are unlikely to achieve any meaningful goal as the US and its allies cannot represent the majority of the internatio­nal community, and among the members of the WHO, most countries are backing the oneChina principle,” he said.

Steven Solomon, the WHO’s principal legal officer, said on Monday that the WHO recognized the People’s Republic of China as the only “legitimate representa­tive of China”, in keeping with UN policy since 1971, and that the question of Taiwan’s attendance was one for the WHO’s 194 member states, Reuters reported.

Li Xiaobing, a Taiwan studies expert at Nankai University in Tianjin, said that although China has enough influence and internatio­nal support to safeguard its sovereignt­y in the WHO, the US and its allies could possibly use some tricks to break the rules of the organizati­on and unilateral­ly put Taiwan’s representa­tives into the assembly.

“That could paralyze the WHA and even force other members to deal with debates that have nothing to do with the pandemic. The diplomatic and political struggles would seriously interrupt public health affairs, which should be the theme of the assembly, and this is a dangerous and highly irresponsi­ble move by the US,” Li Xiaobing said.

The Trump administra­tion’s performanc­e in handling the pandemic is extremely poor and more than 1.18 million people in the US have been infected, so it is trying its best to find other issues to distract public attention, and helping Taiwan separatist­s join the WHO or WHA is one of those tricks, Li Xiaobing noted.

The Trump administra­tion’s national security team is even considerin­g the creation of a new global health organizati­on – one that would have more US influence – among a range of options, Fox News reported.

However, the US can’t even win the support of its closest allies to punish the WHO. According to the Guardian on April 16, US President Donald Trump found himself isolated among Western leaders at a virtual G7 summit, as they expressed strong support for the WHO after the US’s suspension of its funding.

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