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From: Downwithcapitalism <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Sent: Friday, April 27, 2001 1:09 PM
Subject: [downwithcapitalism] FW: Bush challenges China



WSWS.  27 April 2001. Bush hints at war with China over Taiwan.


In a statement which amounted to an open threat of war against China,
President George W. Bush told a television interviewer Wednesday morning
that he was prepared to order full-scale US military action in the event
of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

Speaking on the ABC television program Good Morning, America, Bush was
discussing US policy towards China in the aftermath of the conflict over
the US spy plane, which collided with a Chinese air defense jet. He was
explaining his decision the previous day to authorize the biggest US
arms sales to Taiwan in history, when this interchange took place with
interviewer Charles Gibson:

GIBSON : I'm curious, if you, in your own mind, feel that if Taiwan were
attacked by China, do we have an obligation to defend the Taiwanese?

BUSH : Yes, we do, and the Chinese must understand that. Yes, I would.

GIBSON : With the full force of American military?

BUSH : Whatever it took to help Taiwan defend herself.

This extraordinary language suggests that there would be no limitation
on a Bush administration response to the outbreak of war in the strait
of Taiwan, including the commitment of ground troops, air and missile
strikes against the Chinese mainland, even the use of nuclear weapons.

Bush repeated these comments in a somewhat toned-down presentation in
other interviews given in the course of the day, as part of a media
blitz by the White House to mark his first 100 days in office. On CNN
Bush declared, the Chinese need to hear the message about US defense
of Taiwan. I have said that I will do what it takes to help Taiwan
defend herself, and the Chinese must understand that. Later he told the
Associated Press that military force is certainly an option in the
event of a Chinese attack on Taiwan.

Officials in Beijing reacted with outrage to the declaration that the
United States would intervene militarily within the national territory
of China. A spokesman for the Foreign Ministry said, Taiwan is a part
of China, not a protectorate of any foreign nation. Bush's comments
were dangerous and undermine peace and stability across the Taiwan
Strait and will create further damage to Sino-US relations.

Bush's comments mark a clear reversal of 30 years of American policy in
relation to China and Taiwan. He actually went beyond the language of
the US-Taiwan defense pact established during the Cold War, which was
abrogated after the US-China rapprochement undertaken by Nixon and
Kissinger in 1971.

Since that time US policy towards Taiwan was based on a doctrine known
as strategic ambiguity. Six successive presidents made it clear that
they would oppose any military action by Beijing against the island of
Taiwan, while stopping short of a commitment to a specific level of
military response, let alone a pledge to use American troops in combat
against the Peoples Republic.

This approach had a twofold purpose: to threaten China against any
attempt to recapture the breakaway province by force, and to deter the
corrupt right-wing Kuomintang regime on Taiwan from any unilateral
action which might, for its own purposes, provoke a military clash with
Beijing. This policy has been continued after the disintegration of the
Kuomintang dictatorship and its replacement by a bourgeois regime with
rival political parties, some of which espouse independence for the
island.

The State Department and White House issued clarifications of Bush's
war threat presenting it as a mere reiteration of the traditional US
stance, and much of the American press portrayed the declaration as a
Bush misstatement. But the Washington Post quoted unidentified high US
official denying that any verbal slip was involved. Obviously, the
president chose his words carefully, the official said.

In fact, there is ample reason to view these comments as a signal of a
fundamental shift in the foreign policy of American imperialism in the
Far East. It follows the spy plane incident, which revealed the
increasingly belligerent posture towards China on the part of the
Pentagon, the Bush White House and much of the congressional leadership,
Democratic and Republican. And it flows from the logic of the Taiwan
policy which Bush advocated during the presidential campaign, when he
criticized Clintonwho dispatched aircraft carriers to the strait of
Taiwan in 1996as too soft on Beijing. Speaking at a campaign stop at a
Boeing plant in Seattle, Washington last May, Bush said, They have been
inconsistent on Taiwan. I will be clear.

Several top Bush foreign policy advisers, including Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, and
Lewis Libby, chief of staff to Vice President Cheney, signed a statement
in 1999 denouncing Clinton's China policy and calling for the kind of
open threat of military force which Bush made in his ABC interview.

On Tuesday Bush notified Taiwan that the US government would agree to
sell it a long list of military equipment, including four Kidd-class
naval destroyers, eight diesel-powered submarines and 12 Orion P-3C
aircraft used to detect submarines. The White House did not authorize
sale of the most advanced US destroyer, the Aegis-class ships, which
specialize in anti-aircraft and anti-missile mbat. While this was
presented as a concession to Beijing, Bush merely postponed deciding on
an action that could not be carried out for nearly a decade in any case,
since the US Navy will not have enough Aegis-class ships for its own
use, making them unavailable for export, until 2010.

There was mixed reaction in Congress to the Bush statement and the
decision on arms sales to Taiwan, with support and criticism cutting
across party lines. Some of the most belligerent anti-Chinese statements
came from Democrats. House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, reacting to
the arms sale decision, said, With the sizable buildup of military
forces on the mainland side of the Taiwan Strait, I have serious
questions regarding the Bush administration's decision not to provide
destroyers equipped with advanced command and control systems to
Taiwan.

Another House Democrat, Tom Lantos of California, hailed Bush's ABC
interview, declaring, I think the president's straightforward,
courageous and unambiguous statement will guarantee that hostility in
the Taiwan Strait will not take place.

Several Democrats criticized the Bush remarks, not so much for the
substance as for their offhand manner. Senator John Kerry of
Massachusetts said Bush had apparently made a major policy change with
absolutely no consultation with members of Congress or with our allies
in the region. Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware said, The president
made, I hope, an unintentional substantive mistake this morning.

The Taiwan arms sale decision also underscores the increasingly
unilateral character of American foreign policy. Bush announced that the
US would sell diesel-powered submarines even though no American shipyard
has built one in 40 years, and all up-to-date models are based on German
and Dutch designs. (US shipyards build only nuclear-powered submarines).

Neither Germany nor the Netherlands was consulted about the decision,
and both governments said that their relations with Beijing preclude
selling weapons to Taiwan. A spokesman for German Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder said the German government would maintain this policy despite
the US action. It would never be approved, he said.

As the British Broadcasting Corporation noted in an acid-toned
commentary, That leaves Mr Bush in the unusual position of having
promised to sell technology his country does not control, and may have
difficulty supplying. The BBC quoted a German official saying that US
shipbuilders could try building a diesel-powered submarine from scratch
with a new design, but it would be prohibitively expensive. I wish them
luck, he said sarcastically.

Previous US presidentseven Ronald Reagan and Bush's fatherrefused to
sell diesel-powered submarines to Taiwan, despite providing $21.7
billion in weapons to the island in the past two decades. Sale of
submarines would violate a US understanding with Beijing that Washington
would not sell offensive weapons.

In a further sign of mounting tensions in the Far East, the Washington
Post reported April 20 that the Pentagon has prepared detailed plans for
US fighter jets to escort military reconnaissance planes off the Chinese
coast once the White House orders the resumption of the spy flights that
led to the April 1 collision with a Chinese jet and the death of the
Chinese pilot. The spy flights remain grounded while US and Chinese
officials discuss the fate of the E3P turboprop plane, which remains on
Hainan Island.

















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