Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan risks upsetting
Beijing to no advantage
Analysis: House speaker’s arrival is likely to inflame
relations between the US and China without making Taiwan safer
Vincent Ni
China affairs correspondent
Tue 2 Aug
2022 18.57 BST
In the era
of US-China geopolitical competition, Joe Biden has been keen to ensure great
power politics do not lead to uncontrollable escalation. Yet the trip to Taiwan
by Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of Representatives, is threatening to
break what administration officials call “guardrails”. She is the
highest-ranking member of Congress to visit the island since 1997.
The move,
which is a welcome and a bold assertion of democratic principle to Pelosi’s
supporters, has certainly rattled Beijing in a politically sensitive year for
China’s ruling Communist party. Xi Jinping is expected to be anointed for an
extraordinary third term in the party’s five-yearly congress in the next few
months. It also comes as the People’s Liberation Army is celebrating the 95th
anniversary of its founding.
The visit
of one of Pelosi’s predecessors, Newt Gingrich, a quarter of a century ago also
triggered complaints, but that time Beijing eventually swallowed its irritation.
Not long before Gingrich’s visit, the Taiwan strait crisis lasted for a few
months into 1996. Undoubtedly, China today has more tools in its toolbox, and
its military capabilities far exceed those of 26 years ago – although are still
far behind that of the US.
Beijing
sees the unification with Taiwan as a part of Xi’s project national
rejuvenation. The Chinese president has on several occasions expressed his
preference for peaceful unification but, as has been the case with previous
Chinese leaders, he has also vowed not to rule out a military option as a last
resort. As relations between China and the west deteriorate, talk of a
potential move on Taiwan has been on the increase, particularly following
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February. Unfortunately, Beijing’s own rhetoric
and action do not help dispel such concerns, either.
“We cannot
stand by as the CCP proceeds to threaten Taiwan – and democracy itself,” Pelosi
wrote in her opinion piece for the Washington Post.
But at a
time of strategic suspicion and escalating tensions, her visit does not seem to
contribute to the stabilisation of an increasingly fraught US-China relationship,
or advance American interests, or increase the security of the people of
Taiwan, said Robert Daly, director of the Kissinger Institute on China and the
United States at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington.
“Washington’s
thinking on the trip is now driven by a second order concern, namely fear that,
following Beijing’s promises to escalate its coercion of Taiwan if Speaker
Pelosi lands there, not making the visit would make the US look weak and
increase Beijing’s leverage over Taiwan,” Daly noted.
In
Beijing’s perspective, Pelosi’s visit is a “provocation” that will lead to
further distrust of Washington in the long term. In the last few days, Biden’s
officials have been keen to highlight the differences between the White House
and Congress. But Chinese commentators seemed to conflate the position of the
House speaker with that of the White House itself, even though the two have
separate constitutional roles.
On Monday,
China’s spokesperson warned its military would “not sit idly by” if the visit
happened. A few hours later, China’s Maritime Safety Administration announced
yet another series of exercises in the South China Sea from 2 August to 6
August. On Tuesday, the PLA announced military drills from Thursday – shortly
after her departure.
The US was
catching up, too. On Tuesday, Reuters reported four US warships, including a
carrier strike group led by the USS Ronald Reagan, were positioned in waters
east of the island on “routine” deployments.
Analysts
say that even if Pelosi’s visit does not trigger a full-on military standoff,
the trip will further play into the hawks’ narrative that the US and its allies
are, in effect, helping the Tsai Ing-wen administration to eventually seek
independence. Beijing has long suspected of Biden’s and Tsai’s intention. The
suspicion will be deepened by Monday’s report that a high-profile delegation of
British MPs is also planning on a visit to Taipei later this year.
Bonnie
Glaser, director of the Asia program at the German Marshall Fund in Washington,
said the probability of war or a serious incident is low. “But the probability that
the PRC will take a series of military, economic, and diplomatic actions to
show strength and resolve is not insignificant. Likely it will seek to punish
Taiwan in myriad ways,” she wrote on Twitter.
The
punishment has begun and there is no end in sight. Overnight, Chinese
authorities announced a sudden ban on imports from more than 100 Taiwanese food
companies, according to local media. It is no doubt an act of retribution over
Pelosi’s visit, given China is the island’s largest trading partner.
It is
unclear how Taipei and Washington are to respond to Beijing’s reactions. “My
major worry is that Beijing will take measures that Washington, in turn, will
see itself forced to respond to in order to avoid appearing irresolute or
passive, thus potentially triggering a spiral of escalation,” said Prof Todd
Hall, who directs the University of Oxford China Centre.
Daly
agreed. “Whatever they do to escalate, will then become a new status quo … that
is to make this relationship even more dangerous,” he said. “Beijing and
Washington would be better served if they put their energy into strategic
stability talks rather than escalation games.”
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