Global Times

US civilian leaders trample on security for politics

- By Scott Ritter

The Speaker of the US House of Representa­tives, Nancy Pelosi, has been planning to visit Taiwan for some time now. Initially she had hoped to visit in April but was forced to postpone her visit because she tested positive for COVID- 19. Pelosi is now again planning to visit Taiwan in August. But a strange thing happened on the way to the travel bureau – President Joe Biden, speaking to reporters, stated that “the military thinks it’s not a good idea right now” for Pelosi to travel to Taiwan.

It should be noted that the President is not the normal conduit of informatio­n between US military leadership and the Speaker of the House ( who is second in the line of succession for the presidency and, as such, is kept well briefed.) Indeed, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff himself, General Mark Milley, was among the senior military officials who were briefing Pelosi on issues like China, Taiwan question, and the potential ramificati­ons of a visit by what would be the highest- ranking US delegation ever to the island of 24 million people that stands at the center of US- Chinese tensions today.

The fact that Biden felt compelled to echo what the military had already told Pelosi underscore­s the reality that the Speaker of the House appears to be bound and determined to make the trip, regardless of the consequenc­es.

The military’s job is the defense of the nation. To the extent that senior military leadership interfaces with the civilian leaders of the United States, it is for the purpose of providing profession­al advice on military matters. The military does not make policy, but rather implements it.

However, as the ones who will be called upon to undertake the heavy lifting for any task set forth by their civilian masters, it is the responsibi­lity of senior military officers, especially those who have been selected to serve as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to apprise those who make policy of the military consequenc­es of that policy. It is clear from the stance taken by President Biden in echoing the warnings that had been provided by General Milley and others to Pelosi that the senior leadership of the US military believed that a Pelosi visit to Taiwan would trigger a Chinese response which the armed forces of the United States would not be in position to contain and/ or defeat.

In short, Pelosi’s planned trip to Taiwan would trigger a military clash with China that the US could not, at this point in time, win.

China has been warning senior US officials for some time now about the potential dire consequenc­es of US words and deeds when it came to Taiwan question. While the US ostensibly has promulgate­d a policy – known as the “One China” policy – which recognizes that Taiwan is a part of China, one of the consequenc­es of the heightened geopolitic­al tensions between the US and China is a growing shift in the tenor and tone of US statements regarding Taiwan, which have been interprete­d by China as deliberate­ly encouragin­g the concept of Taiwan independen­ce.

While the official Chinese position is that it would prefer to pursue the peaceful unificatio­n of Taiwan with China, it will not hesitate to use “nonpeacefu­l means” ( i. e., by force) if Taiwan sought to become independen­t.

This policy, and the consequenc­es of continued American indifferen­ce to it, has been forcefully articulate­d by Chinese officials to the National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, the Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and the Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin.

There can be no doubt that the senior policymake­rs and advisers in the Biden administra­tion know and understand the Chinese position regarding the Taiwan question, and that the US military leadership has briefed these persons on the dire consequenc­es which would accrue if the US were to act in a manner which disregarde­d China’s stance. That Pelosi would consider a trip to Taiwan at such a sensitive time in US- Chinese relations underscore­s another reality about American civilian leadership – that they often make decisions on foreign and national security policy based upon domestic political considerat­ions ( i. e., being seen as standing up to China) with little regard to the real- world consequenc­es of their actions, which in this case could mean triggering a war with China the US military is not prepared to fight, and cannot win.

No doubt senior policymake­rs and advisers in the Biden administra­tion know and understand the Chinese position.

The author is a former US Marine Corps intelligen­ce officer.opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

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