Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

How the U.S. can help Taiwan

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Re “A clear U.S. defense of Taiwan,” Opinion, April 12

Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe argues that the United States must clarify its intentions to fight a war with China in the event that Chinese President Xi Jinping orders an invasion of Taiwan.

U.S. leaders should reject Abe’s advice. It is true that Taiwan needs a stronger deterrent against China, but relying on the United States is the wrong approach.

It will never be in America’s interests to join a military confrontat­ion over Taiwan that could quickly escalate to involve the use of nuclear weapons. Pretending otherwise will do little to preserve Taiwanese security.

Instead, the United States should help Taiwan bolster its own defenses. Regional powers (including Japan) can assist by convincing Beijing that an invasion of Taiwan would provoke the same sort of regional backlash as Russia now faces in Europe over its attack on Ukraine.

The status quo across the Taiwan Strait is well worth preserving. However, threatenin­g World War III if something changes is not the answer.

Peter Harris Fort Collins, Colo. The writer is an associate professor of political science at Colorado State University and a nonresiden­t fellow at Defense Priorities.

The author of the op-ed article made irresponsi­ble remarks calling for the U.S. to make clear it would defend Taiwan. This serves only to instigate confrontat­ion between major countries. China firmly rejects this.

The situations in Taiwan and Ukraine cannot be compared. Taiwan is an inalienabl­e part of China, where the People’s Republic of China is the sole legal government. This OneChina Principle is explicitly stated in both joint communiqué­s for establishi­ng China-U.S. and ChinaJapan diplomatic ties.

The root cause of the tension in the Taiwan Strait is that the Taiwan authoritie­s refuse to recognize the One-China Principle. Some external forces have condoned and abetted the growth of separatist forces for “Taiwanese independen­ce.” This gravely violates the basic norms of internatio­nal relations and puts the peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait in serious jeopardy.

The Taiwan question concerns China’s core interests of sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity. It is entirely China’s internal affair, allowing no foreign interferen­ce. The Chinese people’s resolve to defend our sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity remains firm. We will strive for the prospect of peaceful reunificat­ion with utmost sincerity and every effort.

That said, we reserve the option of taking all necessary measures in response to the interferen­ce of foreign forces and the secessioni­st activities of a handful of “Taiwanese independen­ce” separatist­s.

Zhang Ping Los Angeles The writer is the Chinese consul general in Los Angeles.

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