Kuwait Times

US seeks to contain Beijing anger after Biden vows Taiwan defense

Biden vows to defend the island from attack by Beijing

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WASHINGTON: The United States on Friday sought to prevent an escalation with China, saying there was no change in Taiwan policy after President Joe Biden promised to defend the island from attack by Beijing. Tensions have soared in recent months as Beijing steps up air incursions near Taiwan, a self-ruling democracy that the growing Asian power has vowed one day to take over, by force if necessary.

At a CNN televised forum in Baltimore on Thursday evening, Biden was asked whether the United States would come to Taiwan’s defense if China invaded. “Yes,” he responded. “We have a commitment to that.” Biden’s statement appeared at odds with the long-held US policy of “strategic ambiguity,” where Washington helps build Taiwan’s defenses but does not explicitly promise to come to the island’s help in the event of war.

The United States clarified Friday that it was still guided by the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, in which Congress required the United States to provide weaponry to “enable Taiwan to maintain sufficient selfdefens­e capabiliti­es.” “The president was not announcing any change in our policy and there is no change in our policy,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters, reiteratin­g earlier White House comment.

“We will uphold our commitment­s under the act, we will continue to support Taiwan’s self-defense and will continue to oppose any unilateral changes to the status quo,” Price said. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, on a visit to NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels, declined to discuss “hypothetic­als” but said the United States “will continue to help Taiwan with the sorts of capabiliti­es that it needs to defend itself.”

New firmness?

Beijing said that Biden’s comments risked “damaging Sino-US relations,” warning Washington on Friday to “act and speak cautiously on the Taiwan issue.” “China has no room for compromise on issues involving its core interests,” foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said at a press briefing. The US should not underestim­ate China’s “staunch determinat­ion, firm will and strong ability” to defend against what it sees as threats to its sovereignt­y, Wang added.

Price declined to reply to Wang’s remarks, saying, “We have been nothing but clear when it comes to where we stand.” Strategic ambiguity is designed to deter a Chinese invasion but also discourage Taiwan from formally declaring independen­ce-something Beijing regards as a red line.

Biden’s comments were welcomed by Taiwan, which has pushed to bolster internatio­nal alliances to protect itself from Beijing. “The US government has demonstrat­ed, through actual actions, their rock solid support for Taiwan,” Presidenti­al Office spokesman Xavier Chang said in a statement. Biden made similar remarks in August during an interview with ABC, insisting that the US would always defend key allies, naming Taiwan among them, despite the withdrawal from Afghanista­n in the face of the victorious Taliban.

Biden’s remarks were unlikely to come out of ignorance. The veteran politician himself was serving on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1979 and voted to approve the Taiwan Relations Act. Richard McGregor, a senior fellow for East Asia at the Lowy Institute, said

Tensions soar as Beijing steps up

air incursions

Biden may have wanted to show greater firmness. “I suspect Biden was not trying to announce any change. So it was either loose language, or perhaps a slightly harder tone, deliberate­ly adopted because of the way Beijing has increased the tempo of its military harassment of Taiwan recently,” he said.

Warplane incursions

China has ramped up economic, diplomatic and military pressure on Taiwan since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen, who views Taiwan as already sovereign and not part of “one China.” Military pressure has escalated in the last year with China sending waves of fighter jets and nuclearcap­able bombers into Taiwan’s air defense zone. According to an AFP tally, more than 800 flights

have been made into the zone since September last year - 170 just this month. Defending Taiwan, one of Asia’s most progressiv­e democracie­s, has become a rare bipartisan issue in Washington’s otherwise deeply polarized landscape.

At Thursday’s live town hall, Biden was also asked by an audience member whether the United States would be able to keep up with China’s rapid military developmen­t. Biden responded with “Yes.” “Don’t worry about whether... they’re going to be more powerful,” he said. “China, Russia and the rest of the world knows we have the most powerful military in the history of the world.” Biden’s comments come in the wake of a Financial Times report that China has tested a state-of-the-art hypersonic missile with nuclear capacity that flew around the planet before landing, albeit not on target.— AFP

 ?? ?? IN THE AIR: This file handout picture taken and released by Taiwan’s Defense Ministry shows a Taiwan F-16 fighter (left) jet monitoring one of two Chinese H-6 bombers that flew over the Bashi Channel south of Taiwan and the Miyako Strait, near Japanís Okinawa Island.
IN THE AIR: This file handout picture taken and released by Taiwan’s Defense Ministry shows a Taiwan F-16 fighter (left) jet monitoring one of two Chinese H-6 bombers that flew over the Bashi Channel south of Taiwan and the Miyako Strait, near Japanís Okinawa Island.
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