US Arms Sales to Taiwan Escalate Cross-Straits Tension: Experts

Chinese military and foreign affairs experts warned Thursday the US's arms
sales to Taiwan will not only severely undermine the Sino-US relations, add
to the risks of military collisions across the Taiwan Straits, but also
probably lead to a "direct military confrontation" between China and the
United States. 
The US government announced Wednesday that it will sell advanced weapons and
equipment worth billions of US dollars to Taiwan, including four Kidd-class
destroyers, eight diesel-powered submarines, and 12 P-3C Orion
submarine-hunting aircrafts.
China on Wednesday strongly protested against this provocative move and made
solemn representations with the US government.
Lin Zhiyuan, an expert at China's Military Academy of Sciences, said that
this is the biggest batch of arms sales by the US since 1992, when it sold
150 F-16 fighters to Taiwan.
Lin held that the US arms sales are aimed at trying to make up for the
weakness of the Taiwan armed forces and helping harden Taiwan's stand on
refusal of reunification by force.
Lin said that the direct objective of the arms sales is to maintain a
relative balance of military strength across the Straits, and try to check
the People's Liberation Army (PLA) to safeguard China's sovereignty and
territorial integrity.
Intrinsically, however, the expert said, the US always regards Taiwan as an
"unsinkable aircraft carrier", intending to use Taiwan to obstruct China's
reunification and to restrain China, in an attempt to make the reunification
of China impossible.
The US has always trumpeted that it is "protecting Taiwan', but its real
intention is to protect its own strategic interests in the Asia-Pacific
region and to serve its strategic objective of global hegemonism, Lin
stressed. 
Professor Liu Wenzong, an expert on international law at the Foreign Affairs
College here, pointed out that the US action, which clearly interferes in
China's internal affairs and obstructs China's reunification efforts, has
once again seriously violated both international law and norms governing
international relations.
He indicated that all the U.S. governments including the Bush administration
have reiterated time and again their commitment to the three Sino-US joint
communiques. 
In the August 17 Communique, the U.S. government made a clear commitment to
the Chinese side that "it does not seek to carry out a long-term policy of
arms sales to Taiwan, that its arms sales to Taiwan will not exceed, either
in qualitative or in quantitative terms, the level of those supplied in
recent years since the establishment of diplomatic relations between the
United States and China, and that it intends to reduce gradually its sales
of arms to Taiwan, leading over a period of time to a final resolution".
He held that the three Sino-U.S. joint communiques are international
documents of a treaty nature between the two countries. Although the U.S.
government has made oral promises to abide by the three communiques, it
virtually denies them and does not implement them just by often using the
Taiwan Relations Act.
Liu said that, in accordance with the stipulation of the Vienna Convention
on the Law of Treaties between States and International Organizations of
1969, the three documents, issued as "joint communiques", undoubtedly enjoy
the nature of treaties.
What's more, it is one of the basic principles of international law that
"treaties must be observed". Therefore, no country should violate
international law and treaties under the excuse of its internal law
provisions. 

He stressed that all American traditional textbooks on international law
emphasize the importance of observing international treaty obligations. It
is also a general rule in various international documents and judicial
practices that internal laws and stipulations must never override
international laws.
"The U.S. government, therefore, cannot justify its attempt to deny the
three Sino-U.S. joint communiques under the pretext of the Taiwan Relations
Act from either the legislative or the moral perspective," he said.
Professor Wu Xinbo of the American Studies Center of Shanghai's Fudan
University, said in a telephone interview that the U.S. arms sales to Taiwan
is not only a military issue but a serious political one.
The arms sales, in essence, give support to the "Taiwan Independence". Here
the U.S.'s sinister motive is obvious, the scholar noted.
Wu said that he believed that the Taiwan issue could be solved peacefully
through political means. However, the U.S., by selling Taiwan a large number
of advanced weapons, virtually militarizes the issue.
This move will oblige the mainland to consider resorting to " other than
ordinary means" to solve the Taiwan issue, Wu warned.
Wu said that some "Taiwan Independence" advocates believe that, armed with
American weapons, they can rival the mainland militarily. Placing their
hopes on the U.S., they might be induced by the arms sales to take extreme
actions against the mainland.
The experts advised the U.S. to stop selling weapons to Taiwan, and stop
interfering in China's internal affairs. Otherwise, "it will not only
severely undermine the Sino-U.S relations, add to the risks of military
collisions across the Taiwan Straits, but lead to a direct military
confrontation between China and America, " they agreed.
The U.S. will end up with its own interests harmed, not to mention
"protecting" Taiwan, and foreign weapons cannot help build up a "Taiwan
Independence force", the experts state.

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