Los Angeles Times

U.S. WILL DEFEND TAIWAN, BIDEN ASSERTS

Remark represents a potential policy shift as he warns China against invading.

- By Noah Bierman and Eli Stokols

TOKYO — President Biden said Monday that the United States would intervene militarily in Taiwan if necessary, in an apparent shift away from the U.S. policy of “strategic ambiguity” that quickly ratcheted up tensions with China.

The comment — not the first instance of Biden’s blunt rhetoric on the world stage causing confusion and geopolitic­al uncertaint­y — suggested a willingnes­s by the president to go further in defending Taiwan than he has in aiding Ukraine. The Ukrainian government has received tens of billions of dollars in arms and intelligen­ce assistance in the war launched by Russia, but not the direct interventi­on of U.S. or North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on troops.

“You didn’t want to get involved in the Ukraine conflict militarily for obvious reasons,” a reporter said to Biden during the president’s joint news conference in Tokyo with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. “Are you willing to get involved militarily to defend Taiwan if it comes to that?”

“Yes,” Biden responded, adding: “That’s the commitment we made.”

But he said an invasion of the island by China was highly unlikely.

“My expectatio­n is it will not happen,” Biden said. “It will not be attempted.”

Biden made similar comments at a televised town hall in October, only to have the White House walk them back. The U.S. has made a commitment to provide Taiwan the means to defend itself but — just as there is no NATO obligation for the U.S. to defend Ukraine — has no treaty to defend it militarily.

Before making the comments, Biden said U.S. policy toward Taiwan “has not changed at all.”

“We agree with the ‘oneChina’ policy,” Biden said, referring to the long-standing position of recognizin­g the People’s Republic of China as the country’s sole legal government. “But the idea that — that it can be taken by force ... is just not

appropriat­e. It will dislocate the entire region and be another action similar to what happened in Ukraine. And so, it’s a burden that is even stronger.”

But he also warned China against an invasion and said it was important for the U.S. and other nations to send a signal to Beijing by upholding sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine.

“Russia has to pay a longterm price for that in terms of the sanctions. It’s not just about Ukraine,” Biden said, adding that if Russia were not made to suffer long-term consequenc­es, “what signal does that send to China about the cost of attempting to take Taiwan by force?”

The comments drew a swift response from Beijing. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin expressed “strong dissatisfa­ction and resolute opposition” to Biden’s comments.

“China has no room for compromise or concession­s on issues involving China’s core interests such as sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity,” he said. “China will take firm action to safeguard its sovereignt­y and security interests, and we will do what we say.”

For its part, the Taiwanese government said in a statement that it was grateful to the U.S. for “reaffirmin­g its rock-solid commitment to Taiwan.”

When asked Monday about any contingenc­y plans to provide military support for Taiwan, Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III declined to discuss specifics and insisted official policy has not changed.

“As the president said, our one-China policy has not changed,” he said in a news conference at the Pentagon, which Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark A. Milley also attended.

Biden “reiterated that policy and our commitment to peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” the Defense secretary said. That includes, Austin said, the U.S. pledge to supply Taiwan with the “means” to defend itself in case of attack.

For decades, Washington has pursued a policy of “strategic ambiguity” that does not spell out exactly what the U.S. would do if the democratic­ally self-governed island — which China claims as its rightful territory — were attacked.

The act dates to 1979, when Washington switched diplomatic recognitio­n from Taipei to Beijing.

Biden’s comment in Tokyo was reminiscen­t of his remarks in Warsaw two months ago when he declared that Russian President Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power.” Aides quickly clarified that the president was speaking in a personal capacity and not, in fact, announcing a drastic shift in U.S. policy to a change of government­s in Moscow.

But in this instance, some foreign policy experts took issue more with the administra­tion’s quick downplayin­g of Biden’s remarks rather than with their substance.

Richard N. Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, tweeted that a shift to a policy of “strategic clarity” was “exactly right given China’s military buildup.” In the event of an invasion, Taiwan’s geography as an island nation and its military weakness compared with that of Ukraine, he said, would require the kind of direct military involvemen­t that the U.S. has steered clear of with regard to Ukraine.

“This is the third time @POTUS has spoken out in favor of strategic clarity on Taiwan and third time WH staff has tried to walk it back,” Haass wrote. “Better to embrace it as new U.S. stance, one that is fully consistent with one-China policy but that alters how U.S. will go about implementi­ng it.”

Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasia Group, a New York-based global risk assessment firm, said a U.S. position muddled by an apparent gap between Biden’s comments and his administra­tion’s stated policy position could be advantageo­us in creating more confusion in Beijing. But there is no need to create additional uncertaint­y and tension with China at the moment, Bremmer said.

“There was never credibilit­y around the notion of the U.S. going to war in Ukraine and there has always been credibilit­y about military involvemen­t in Taiwan, so in a way this is much ado about nothing,” Bremmer said. “But we are right now in a better position visa-vis China: The Russian military is showing they are completely incapable, and the U.S. is leading a much stronger allied response to Ukraine than anyone thought possible, and the Chinese are taking that away as a lesson. So this really isn’t the time we need to be making hay on Taiwan.”

The situation regarding Taiwan has historical­ly been one of the prime tinderboxe­s in Sino-U.S. relations, with even the slightest shifts in policy or tone parsed thoroughly in Beijing, Taipei and Washington.

In 2001, when then-President George W. Bush made comments similar to Biden’s , vowing that the U.S. would do “whatever it took” to help Taiwan defend itself, the administra­tion also insisted that U.S. policy had not changed.

Biden’s comments raising new doubt about the U.S. commitment to its oneChina policy come as China gears up for its 20th Communist Party congress later this year — and could provide President Xi Jinping, eager to cement his power through a third term, a pretext for escalating matters with Taiwan, according to Bonnie Glaser, Asia program director at the German Marshall Fund think tank.

“If [Xi] feels backed into a corner, he may be forced to act in a way that would be contrary to what President Biden actually wants to see,” Glaser said.

Even short of that, any additional tension will further complicate cooperatio­n in other areas, she added.

“There’s so much distrust that there are already insurmount­able challenges to cooperatio­n in the U.S.China relationsh­ip,” she said. “It’s just become exceedingl­y difficult to work together on any issue.”

Kishida, speaking at the same news conference, said that the subject of Taiwan had come up in his meeting with Biden and that there was no fundamenta­l change in policy by either country.

“We are against any unilateral attempt to change the status quo by force in Asia,” the prime minister said. He said that was why Japan had been cooperatin­g with U.S.-led efforts to sanction Russia and provide assistance to Ukraine.

Kishida reiterated the importance of the U.S. commitment to defend Japan in the event of attack.

“We have full confidence in the response of the United States,” he said.

Bierman reported from Tokyo and Stokols from Washington. Times staff writers Henry Chu in London, Courtney Subramania­n and Tracy Wilkinson in Washington and Stephanie Yang in Taipei, Taiwan, contribute­d to this report.

‘We agree with the “one-China” policy. But the idea that — that it can be taken by force ... is just not appropriat­e.’

— PRESIDENT BIDEN, referring to Taiwan

 ?? Eugene Hoshiko Pool Photo ?? JAPANESE
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, right, during a welcome ceremony for President Biden in Tokyo.
Eugene Hoshiko Pool Photo JAPANESE Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, right, during a welcome ceremony for President Biden in Tokyo.

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