<http://online.wsj.com/article_print/0,,SB111031906988273848,00.html>

The Wall Street Journal


 March 9, 2005

 COMMENTARY


Secession Law Strains Ties

By JOHN J. TKACIK JR.
March 9, 2005


WASHINGTON -- Beijing's new anti-secession law can hardly fail to
exacerbate existing tensions in U.S.-China relations. That's because it
undermines the tacit understanding the two countries have long shared over
Taiwan, under which Beijing pretended to pursue a policy of peaceful
unification while Washington pretended to pursue a one-China policy.

Beijing's side of that understanding has been called into question by the
anti-secession law, the text of which was released yesterday. It not only
refers to the use of "nonpeaceful means," but sets open-ended circumstances
under which China can resort to such measures. These include simply
deciding that "possibilities for a peaceful reunification should be
completely exhausted," something which China could redefine to mean
whatever it wants.

Also called into question are Beijing's repeated claims that the bill is
simply a response to the Chinese public's clamor for a national-unification
law. That assertion is belied by the unprecedented secrecy surrounding the
legislation's text prior to its public release yesterday. Fewer than 100
Chinese legislators, party officials and scholars in Beijing had access to
drafts of the bill prior to its release, and none were permitted to make
copies or even notes about its wording. All were warned that any leaks
would be treated as theft of state secrets and punished accordingly.

But, despite the lack of details, alarm bells have already been ringing in
Washington for many months about the bill's likely impact on U.S.-China
relations. The Bush administration has been closely watching the issue ever
since it was first publicly raised last May, during a meeting in London
between Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and a group of overseas Chinese
citizens. In private, U.S. officials repeatedly made clear to Beijing that
any attempt to "redefine" the status quo in the Taiwan Strait would force
the administration to reassess its policy on Taiwan.

Such warnings were conveyed in stringent terms after China publicly
confirmed its intention of introducing an anti-secession law last Dec. 17,
less than a week after Taiwanese voters had removed any conceivable urgency
for such a bill by denying a majority to pro-independence parties in
Taiwan's parliament, the Legislative Yuan.

That message was conveyed to Chen Yulin, China's top official on Taiwan
affairs, when he visited Washington in early January. Both the White House
and State Department told him in no uncertain terms that the U.S. viewed
the "anti-secession" law as an unhelpful escalation in cross-Strait
rhetoric. Later that month, Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Richard
Lawless and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Randall Schriver traveled
to Beijing and reiterated Washington's concerns. They warned that
Washington was beginning to see the "continuing substantial increase" in
China's military capabilities as evidence that Beijing was preparing for an
armed showdown. But they got little joy from their Chinese host, Maj. Gen.
Zhang Bangdong, who recited a Chinese proverb. "The tree may prefer
tranquility but the wind will not subside," he said warning that the winds
of independence blowing from Taiwan could not be ignored.

Rebuffed in private, the Bush administration went public with its concerns
last month. Central Intelligence Agency Director Porter Goss told a Feb 16.
Senate hearing that Beijing's military modernization buildup, "could tilt
the balance of power in the Taiwan Strait" and "threaten U.S. forces in the
region." Three days later, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld broke new ground in a statement of
"common strategic objectives" with their Japanese counterparts, Foreign
Minister Nobutaka Machimura and Defense Minister Yoshinori Ohno. For the
first time in the U.S.-Japan alliance's near half-century of existence, the
two countries listed Taiwan among their common strategic objectives.
Although the wording was anodyne, referring simply to "the peaceful
resolution of issues concerning the Taiwan Strait through dialogue," it was
enough to prompt furious protests from Beijing.

Now, with the text of the bill having finally been made public, Washington
will be studying it closely to see whether Beijing has irrevocably
abandoned any pretense of continuing to pursue a policy of peaceful
reunification. The Bush administration hopes that, despite all the
rhetoric, in the end the Chinese leadership will opt to ease tensions
rather than enflame them.

But if it becomes clear beyond doubt that Beijing has chosen to abandon its
side of the tacit understanding over Taiwan that has persisted for decades,
then there will be little reason for the U.S. to persist in its side. In
the past, it suited Washington's purposes to pretend it had a one-China
policy without drawing attention to the fact that this does not mean (and
has never meant) that the U.S. recognizes Beijing's territorial claims to
Taiwan.

Now that Beijing's aggressive action in tabling the anti-secession bill has
changed the equation, it is time for a rethink.

Mr. Tkacik, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation in
Washington, D.C., is a retired officer in the U.S. foreign service who
served in Beijing, Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Taipei.

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The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
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"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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