EU braces for China-US escalation risk as Taiwan
tensions rise
Beijing has warned of a ‘military’ response if US
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visits Taiwan this week.
BY STUART
LAU AND LILI BAYER
August 1,
2022 4:00 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-braces-for-china-us-escalation-risk-as-taiwan-tensions-rise/
The
deteriorating war of words between the U.S. and China over Taiwan “could easily
escalate” and is being closely watched in European capitals, according to
senior diplomats.
Tensions
are growing between the world’s two biggest superpowers as Beijing ratchets up
its threats over a possible visit by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taiwan
in the coming days.
From
Brussels to Paris, EU officials have been reluctant to weigh into the dispute
in public, even as China edges closer to the risk of a military standoff with
the U.S. Behind the scenes, however, European diplomats accept there is clearly
a danger that the situation could spiral out of control.
Analysts
are now urging EU leaders to pay attention and prepare for trouble ahead.
“Worst-case
scenarios sometimes do come to pass,” said Boris Ruge, vice-chairman of the
Munich Security Conference, citing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as an example.
“Europeans would do well to prepare for contingencies, backing up Taiwan while
remaining in close contact with Beijing, and helping to deescalate.”
Pelosi
announced on Sunday that she is taking a Congressional delegation on a tour of
Asia. A rumored stop-off in Taiwan — which has provoked a fierce backlash from
Beijing — was not mentioned in her official itinerary but could still happen.
China
insists that a visit to Taiwan by Pelosi would be a blatant breach of the “one
China” policy governing the territory’s status, and a signal of American
support for Taiwanese independence.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping underlined his position last week during a tense call with
Joe Biden. “Those who play with fire will perish by it,” China’s foreign
ministry quoted Xi as saying. “It is hoped that the U.S. will be clear-eyed
about this.” China’s defense ministry has warned that the “Chinese military
will never sit idly by” if Pelosi’s trip goes ahead.
Analysts
believe Xi will want to show a strong repose to any sign the U.S. is moving to
support Taiwanese independence, in part because he is seeking a norm-breaking
third term in office this fall.
The U.K.
has suggested arming Taiwan, warning that the West must not make the same
mistakes in failing to stand up for the Taiwanese as it did over Ukraine.
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock recently described the “self-confident
and above all robust appearance of China” in relation to Taiwan as “a global
challenge.”
In public,
however, most other European capitals have been more cautious in their
comments. When asked about China’s threatened military response to a Pelosi
visit, the French foreign ministry and the EU’s foreign policy arm would not
comment.
One EU diplomat
said silence at this stage is to be expected, given Taiwan is primarily
regarded as a U.S. interest, but “the reaction will be different if words
become action.”
Closely
watched
Asked if
the tensions were a concern for NATO, a senior European diplomat said: “Not
yet, but it could easily escalate.” The “worst case” would see American
attention diverted away from Ukraine to tensions with China over Taiwan, the
senior diplomat said.
A third
senior European diplomat said the risk of the clashes between Washington and
Beijing boiling over is being “closely watched.”
Urmas Paet,
a vice-chair of the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee, warned
that the intensifying Ukraine war had increased the risk of Chinese aggression
toward Taiwan “exponentially.”
“The
European Union must also be able to keep an eye on China’s actions, including
in relation to Taiwan,” Paet said. “Full cooperation between the EU and the
U.S. is very important both in terms of Russian aggression against Ukraine and
also in relation to China’s actions in its neighborhood.”
Until
relatively recently, Europe had shied away from talking about Taiwan — a
democratic island of 23 million that Beijing claims is part of China. The mood
soured further as China pledged a “no limits partnership” with Russia, and toed
the Kremlin line on its so-called “special military operation” against Ukraine.
The Russian
invasion of Ukraine has prompted European policymakers to mull over the
previously unimaginable consequences of imposing economic sanctions on the
world’s second-biggest economy, should Beijing make a military move against
Taiwan.
“In the
event of a military invasion, we have made it very clear that the EU, with the
United States and its allies, will impose similar or even greater measures than
we have now taken against Russia,” the EU’s incoming ambassador to China, Jorge
Toledo, said earlier this month.
Clea Caulcutt contributed reporting
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