Pelosi’s Taiwan Visit Risks Undermining U.S.
Efforts With Asian Allies
The Biden administration has built an economic and
diplomatic strategy in Asia to counter China, assuring friendly countries that
the U.S. is in the region for the long haul.
Jane Perlez
By Jane
Perlez
Aug. 3,
2022
Updated
5:42 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/03/world/asia/taiwan-pelosi-visit-allies.html
The Biden
administration has spent months building an economic and diplomatic strategy in
Asia to counter China, shoring up its alliances and assuring friendly countries
that the United States is in the region for the long haul.
The
president has sent top military officials to seal new partnerships, and paid
attention to a tiny nation in the Pacific, the Solomon Islands. He has launched
a plan to arm Australia with nuclear-powered submarines and initiated a
regional economic pact. He visited South Korea and Japan in May, and for the
first time invited the two countries to a NATO meeting, to reinforce that Asia
wasn’t forgotten as war raged in Ukraine.
The visit
to Taiwan by Speaker Nancy Pelosi now threatens to undermine the push by the
White House, leaving allies to wonder what damage had been done to the
president’s united front in Asia.
The fear is
that the trip, which will also include stops this week in South Korea and
Japan, is an unnecessary provocation that distracts from the allies’ efforts to
counter China’s military might and economic clout.
While U.S.
allies have largely remained mum on the visit so far, there’s a sense among
America’s friends that they were left out in the cold to watch as China
threatened the United States and Taiwan, the self-governed island that China
claims as its own.
The
handling of Ms. Pelosi’s visit was worrisome because, intentionally or not, it
showed China’s power and diminished the role of the allies, said Seong-Hyon
Lee, a South Korean fellow at the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at
Harvard University.
“The very
fact that China’s potential response becomes a heated debate in Washington
reveals China’s rise in status,” Mr. Lee said. “Washington’s hesitance has been
already widely read in the region. This is a very poor signaling diplomacy
coming from Washington to its allies and partners in the region.”
Despite its
short-term economic issues, Beijing has invested deeply, financially and
diplomatically, in long-term plans to dominate the region.
China keeps
telling its Asian neighbors that it is their natural partner by geographic
location and cultural commonality. It is trying to persuade them that the
United States is a distant and declining power, with a broken political system,
bound to lose its influence in Asia.
The Chinese
Navy has steadily increased its patrols and military exercises in the South
China Sea, sending more sophisticated ships. Its military aircraft have
harassed warplanes of American allies in recent months. In May, Australia
complained that a Chinese fighter jet dangerously intercepted one of its
surveillance aircraft.
Given
China’s economic and military might, allies want consultation with Washington,
something they didn’t appear to get on Ms. Pelosi’s foray to Taiwan.
The foreign
minister of Australia, Penny Wong, suggested this on Wednesday when she called
on all sides, not only China, to back off.
“All
parties should consider how they best contribute to de-escalating the current tensions,
and we all want peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,” Ms. Wong said.
President
Biden meeting in June with South Korea’s president, Yoon Suk-yeol, left, and
Japan’s prime minister, Fumio Kishida.Credit...Brendan Smialowski/Agence
France-Presse — Getty Images
Mr. Biden’s
assurances on Asia in recent months had been comforting to nations facing
China’s ire.
A favorite
expression of that ire has been trade boycotts for what China considers bad
behavior. Just hours after Ms. Pelosi’s arrival in Taiwan, China imposed
economic measures on the island in retaliation.
Over the
past two years, China has banned Australia’s exports of wine, lobsters and
coal, after its government called for an international investigation into the
origins of Covid-19, which first surfaced in China. The Chinese government
still maintains economic sanctions on South Korea for allowing the United
States in 2017 to deploy a missile defense system known as THAAD.
When the
new South Korean leader, Yoon Suk-yeol, said recently that he might consider a
second installment of the system, China threatened more sanctions.
The
economic bans and China’s growing authoritarianism have hurt its standing in
South Korea, where a record high of 80 percent of the population now holds
negative views of the country, according to a recent study conducted by the Pew
Research Center.
“China
ranks first among South Korea’s most disliked countries,” said a retired
general, Shin Won-sik, who is now a member of the National Assembly. “Around a
decade ago, South Koreans had similar opinions toward China as they did the
U.S.”
In response
to the China threat, he said, South Korea and Japan, which have historically
had frosty relations, have agreed for the first time to join with the United
States to start trilateral military exercises.
Japan, one
of the most enthusiastic supporters of Washington’s China strategy, has
increased coordination with the United States on Taiwan. The defense ministry
in Japan has also moved troops, antiaircraft artillery and surface-to-ship
missile defense batteries to the country’s southern islands, some of which are
close to Taiwan.
Public
opinion in Japan has shifted decisively against China, and support for Taiwan
has grown, presenting an opportunity for Washington to capitalize on closer
relations between Japan and Taiwan. But Japan also wants to avoid any
unnecessary new friction between the United States and China.
The trip
was “totally not a strategic benefit for us,” said Ryo Sahashi, an associate
professor at the University of Tokyo. “We strongly support Taiwan democracy and
also we really appreciate U.S. efforts for Taiwan’s defense, including arms
sales to Taiwan.”
“But this
is totally different,” he added. “What we really want to see is a more quiet
environment which really enables us, Japan and the United States, to enhance
our security partnership with Taipei.”
Across the
region, the United States has made strategic efforts to embrace the allies in a
more cohesive coalition, with military and diplomatic underpinnings.
A year ago,
Australia agreed to a landmark defense pact, known as AUKUS, with the United
States and Britain, to acquire nuclear propulsion technology for the planned submarines.
In a visit
last month to Australia, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark
A. Milley, confirmed Washington’s policy of fortifying Australia with new
weapons. “The Chinese military activity is noticeably and statistically more
aggressive than in previous years,” Mr. Milley said during his visit.
Together
with the United States, Australia is spending money and diplomatic capital to
help counter growing Chinese influence in the Pacific islands, a strategically
important area in the event of war with China.
It’s a
complicated position to navigate. The economies of many of America’s allies in
the region, including Japan, South Korea and Australia, depend heavily on
China. About one-third of Australia’s exports go to China.
Despite bad
diplomatic relations, Australia’s sales of iron ore, a main raw material for
China’s industry, gained last year. Now, wine and coal exporters are trying to
get their products back into the Chinese market.
There has
been a flurry of high-level discussions to try to repair relations. The new
Australian defense minister, Richard Marles, met with his Chinese counterpart,
Wei Fenghe, in Singapore last month.
A British
nuclear-powered submarine at a naval base in Perth, Australia, last year.
Australia is in the process of acquiring nuclear propulsion technology for
submarines through a landmark defense pact with the United States and Britain.
A British
nuclear-powered submarine at a naval base in Perth, Australia, last year.
Australia is in the process of acquiring nuclear propulsion technology for
submarines through a landmark defense pact with the United States and
Britain.Credit...Richard Wainwright/EPA, via Shutterstock
Ms. Wong
met with Wang Yi, her Chinese counterpart, in Bali, ending a two-year diplomatic
freeze. She has gone out of her way to say that China and Australia are not
enemies.
As
countries now brace for the fallout from Ms. Pelosi’s visit, the increased
tensions between the two superpowers have ultimately raised questions about the
authority of the American president.
“It doesn’t
say much about Biden’s clout that he can’t prevail on the speaker from his own
party,” said Alan Dupont, a former defense intelligence analyst for the
Australian government, noting that the president had said the military did not
think the visit was a good idea.
A previous
speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich, visited Taiwan 25 years ago. But Mr.
Gingrich was a Republican and President Bill Clinton was a Democrat, a
political situation that made the trip more defensible. Mr. Gingrich visited
China and met with its leader at the time, Jiang Zemin, before going to Taiwan,
via Japan, an unthinkable schedule today.
China’s
military was also far weaker back then, and was only beginning to modernize its
forces, which now include a far stronger array of missiles and a vastly
expanded navy.
Even in
Australia, a democratic country with raucous politics, where people knew that
Ms. Pelosi was a powerful figure, it was unfathomable that Mr. Biden did not
persuade her to cancel, Mr. Dupont said.
“An
unnecessary crisis,” he said. “An own goal, the U.S. put itself in this
position.”
Ben Dooley
contributed reporting. Jin Yu Young contributed translation.
Jane Perlez
was the Beijing bureau chief. She has served as bureau chief in Kenya, Poland,
Austria, Indonesia and Pakistan, and was a member of the team that won the 2009
Pulitzer Prize for reporting in Pakistan and Afghanistan. @JanePerlez

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