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From:

http://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/FRONT/leadstory.html

Los Angeles Times front Page Lead Story

U.S. Has Secretly Expanded Military Ties With Taiwan

Asia: Contact includes an exchange of ideas on armed forces
strategy and Taipei's response in the event of invasion.
Pentagon's moves may further upset U.S.-China relations. By JIM
MANN, Times Staff Writer


WASHINGTON--Over the past three years, the Clinton administration
has quietly forged an extensive military relationship with
Taiwan, authorizing the Pentagon to conduct the kind of strategic
dialogue with Taiwan's armed forces that had not been permitted
by any previous administration since 1979, according to U.S. and
Taiwanese sources.

The secret expansion of military ties began after the Taiwan
Strait crisis of 1996, in which China fired missiles into the
waters near Taiwan and the United States countered by sending two
aircraft carriers to help protect the island. A Pentagon review
later concluded that the United States needed to broaden its
contacts with Taiwan's armed forces.


The broadened ties with Taiwan are particularly sensitive because
they could further roil the unsettled relations between the
United States and China.

The government in Beijing considers Taiwan to be a province of
China. Two decades ago, when the United States established
diplomatic ties with China and withdrew recognition from Taiwan,
the Pentagon restricted military contacts with Taiwan essentially
to two areas: arms sales and intelligence-sharing.

But after the 1996 crisis, the United States opened the way for a
much more extensive relationship with Taiwan, encompassing visits
by Taiwanese military leaders to Washington and a sharing of
ideas between uniformed officers about military strategy in East
Asia and about Taiwan's response to an invasion.

"The discussions have turned from procurement to the policy
level," one Taiwanese source said. "It's things like: 'What are
your aims? What do you think? What do you see happening in the
next five years?' We never had that sort of conversation with the
Pentagon before. . . . We share with the United States the action
plan [for what Taiwan would do] if we were attacked."

Recently, Sha Zukang, a senior Chinese Foreign Ministry official,
warned Washington in a published interview that "conducting any
form of military cooperation with Taiwan would seriously
interfere in China's internal affairs, seriously violate China's
sovereignty and territorial integrity and seriously contravene"
communiques between the United States and China.

At the moment, the United States does not have any military
relationship with China comparable to the one with Taiwan.

On Wednesday, President Clinton said he was temporarily
postponing a planned trip to Taiwan by a group of U.S. military
experts who were supposed to assess Taiwan's air-defense needs.
But the Pentagon's secretly expanded military ties with Taiwan
are not affected by Clinton's action--and address much more than
Taiwan's possible needs for new hardware.

Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui appeared to refer fleetingly to
Taiwan's deepening military relationship with the United States
in a little-noticed portion of a radio interview earlier this
month in which he ignited an international controversy by
referring to his government's relationship to China as that of
one state to another. Beijing has threatened to respond with
military force if Taipei ever formally declares independence.

"In the foreseeable future, the security cooperation between
Taiwan and the United States will remain an important factor in
maintaining stability in the Taiwan Strait," Lee said in the
interview with a German radio station. He didn't explain what he
meant by "security cooperation."

China is said to have become increasingly concerned about the
growing contact between the Pentagon and Taiwan's military. It
objected strongly to the visit to Washington last October by Tang
Fei, the chief of general staff of Taiwan's armed forces, who met
with Defense Secretary William S. Cohen and Gen. Henry H.
Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

One of China's biggest worries in recent years has been the
possibility of a new quasi-alliance between the U.S. and Taiwan.
China already has complained about the recently strengthened
military ties between the United States and Japan, and the
expanded U.S. links with Taiwan could further complicate China's
military position in East Asia.

Contacts Downplayed but Not Denied

When the United States began exploring during the past year the
possibility of establishing a missile-defense system to protect
Taiwan, Chinese officials told the administration that they were
afraid that doing so would require U.S. and Taiwanese military
personnel to exchange information and cooperate with each other
in new ways.

Asked recently about the expanded military ties with Taiwan, a
senior Clinton administration official sought to downplay their
significance, saying, "I wouldn't call them dramatic." But he
didn't deny the existence of the contacts.

The Pentagon official in charge of the new military relationship
is Kurt M. Campbell, deputy assistant secretary of Defense for
East Asia and the Pacific. In response to a query, Campbell said,
"Everything we have done has been approved at very high levels."

Most of the information about the new U.S.-Taiwan military ties
was gathered by The Times before the furor erupted over Lee's
comments on Taiwan's relationship to China.

As explained by Clinton administration officials, there are
several purposes for the new military relationship with Taiwan.

One is to reduce the sense of isolation in Taiwan, giving its
military leaders a greater confidence in their ties with the
United States. Another is for the Pentagon to gain better
information about the thinking and plans of Taiwan's armed
forces. A third is to respond to the Republican-led Congress,
which has been strongly supportive of Taiwan.

"These ties represent something the United States can do for
Taiwan . . . without providing hardware to Taiwan that would
offend China," said one senior Clinton administration official.

The recent military contacts give the Pentagon a considerably
more intimate relationship with Taiwan than with China.

The United States had extensive military contacts with the
Chinese People's Liberation Army during the final years of the
Cold War in the 1980s, when the Pentagon viewed China as a
partner against the Soviet Union.

The Bush administration cut off these ties within days after the
Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989. The Clinton administration
began to restore the military relationship with Beijing, but the
contacts were recently cut off again by China in May after U.S.
missiles hit the Chinese Embassy in the Yugoslav capital,
Belgrade.

When the Carter administration severed relations with Taiwan's
government in 1978, it told Beijing that it was reserving the
right to sell military equipment to Taiwan. And the 1979 Taiwan
Relations Act required the United States to provide the arms that
Taiwan needed to defend the island.

In the years since, most of the disputes between the United
States and China over Taiwan have focused on U.S. arms sales, or
"hardware." China opposes American arms sales to Taiwan, both
because it argues that they convey an official relationship and
because it fears that the weapons strengthen Taiwan's hand in
dealing with the mainland.

In the aftermath of the 1996 confrontation in the Taiwan Strait,
the Clinton administration quietly decided to forge the
military-to-military contacts with Taiwan, which are known in the
Pentagon's lexicon as "software."

"Taiwan needs software almost as much as it does hardware," one
administration official said. "It has problems in absorbing the
hardware it already has."

It is not clear, however, whether the Pentagon's military
exchanges with Taiwan are a substitute for weapons systems or
whether they are in addition to the new hardware.

The Clinton administration has continued to provide new arms
systems to Taiwan, including an expensive early-warning radar
system approved in the spring. But it has not supplied as much as
Taiwan has requested; for example, the United States has turned
down Taiwan's requests for submarines.

Officials in Taiwan characterize the military ties with the
Pentagon as a closely held secret. But some officials connected
with the Taiwan military have talked about the ties in public in
Washington.

One of them is Alexander C. Huang, a Taiwan scholar and former
government official whose father was Taiwan's chief of military
intelligence from 1989 to 1991. The younger Huang worked on
military affairs for several years at the Taipei Economic and
Cultural Representative Office, Taiwan's de facto embassy in
Washington, and is now a visiting fellow at the Brookings
Institution, a Washington think tank.

Strategic Ties More Valued Than Weapons

During a public forum in Washington earlier this year, Huang
suggested that Taiwan's developing strategic ties with the
Pentagon were of greater value to the island's military than a
missile-defense system.

"I don't care so much if we have a missile-defense system," Huang
said. "We can have a quasi-alliance relationship with the United
States without [such a system]. More important are the
conversations taking place between [Taiwan's] Ministry of Defense
and the Pentagon."

The Clinton administration has been under pressure from Congress
to provide greater support for Taiwan.

This year, Taiwan supporters--including Sen. Jesse Helms
(R-N.C.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee--have introduced the Taiwan Security Enhancement Act,
which would authorize the sale to Taiwan of new hardware such as
theater-missile defense equipment, air-to-air missiles, diesel
submarines and Aegis destroyers.

The legislation also would establish the creation of a direct
communications link between the U.S. Pacific Command in Hawaii
and Taiwan's military headquarters. The bill has not come close
to enactment, but a lobbyist for Taiwan said recently that some
of the provisions could still be passed in piecemeal fashion in
other legislation.

Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved


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