Sentinel & Enterprise

Biden’s clarity on Taiwan is risky

“Strategic ambiguity” is what U.S. diplomats call America’s policy on Taiwan and China. The strategy is to keep the peace by maintainin­g ambiguity over the degree the U.S. would go to defend Taiwan from a Chinese invasion.

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‘The more that President

Biden locks the U.S. into a specific response ... the less room for maneuver he leaves for himself or his successors.’

- Ryan Hass, Brookings Institutio­n

To date, that intentiona­l vagueness has met its objective of keeping Taiwan from declaring formal independen­ce, which would incense China, and from China invading what it considers a renegade province.

Last Monday, however, President Biden was unambiguou­s about U.S. policy. During a stop in Japan, Biden was asked by a reporter, “Are you willing to get involved militarily to defend Taiwan if it comes to that?”

“Yes,” Biden answered simply, later adding: “That’s the commitment we made.”

He was likely referring to the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, which actually does not commit the U.S. to militarily defend Taiwan, but to provide self-defense capabiliti­es. Biden apparently believes otherwise.

But Biden’s approach, if that indeed reflects U.S. policy, may not be as effective a strategy, according to Ryan Hass, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n. Hass, an expert in East Asia, told an editorial writer in an e-mail interview that “there are few issues in the world where words matter more than on the question of war in the Taiwan Strait” and that “in this respect, the inconsiste­ncies in the Biden administra­tion’s responses to questions about whether the United States would intervene in a cross-strait conflict is troubling.

“America’s abiding interest is in preserving peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,” Hass continued. “Preserving this objective requires standing in the way of the two paths that could lead to conflict, either a Chinese military invasion or efforts by Taiwan to declare de jure independen­ce. The more that President Biden locks the U.S. into a specific response to a future hypothetic­al conflict, the less room for maneuver he leaves for himself or his successors.”

More constructi­vely, Biden used his trip to introduce a 13-nation pact called the IndoPacifi­c Economic Framework for Prosperity. Along with the U.S. and regional leaders Japan, India, South Korea and Australia, the agreement includes Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam (but notably, not Taiwan). Together the 13 countries represent about 40% of the global economy.

But unlike Biden’s unambiguou­s statement on Taiwan, there’s more ambiguity to the new arrangemen­t, as it’s designed to address issues like supply chain resilience, digital trade, corruption and clean energy. It does not address issues of market access, which will make it not only less economical­ly meaningful but less of a geopolitic­al counterwei­ght to China.

Had Biden really wanted to blunt Beijing’s increasing influence, he would have advocated for the pact his former boss, President Barack Obama, negotiated, the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p, which went forward without the U.S. after it was irresponsi­bly demonized during the 2016 campaign by both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.

“China has sought aggressive­ly to sell the idea that the U.S. is an anxious, declining power retreating into greater isolation, while China is the new core of Asia’s economic growth story,” Hass said. “If the U.S. were to return to its seat at the trade table in Asia through CPTPP (the renamed Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-pacific Partnershi­p), it would render obsolete China’s efforts to present America as a fading power and itself as the growth engine of the future.”

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