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WHO'S TO BLAME? : The study sponsored in part by Armitage
International takes the Bush administration to task for creating
potential security perils for both countries
By Charles Snyder
STAFF REPORTER IN WASHINGTON
Sunday, Feb 24, 2008, Page 3
The relationship between the US and Taiwan has deteriorated
dangerously in recent years and both sides must take a wide
range of steps to ensure Taiwan's security and "break the
negative cycle," a joint study by a conservative think tank and
an international consulting company in Washington said in a
study released on Friday.
The study, sponsored by Armitage International and the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI), takes the administration of US
President George W. Bush to task for allowing US-Taiwan
relations to slip, creating potential security perils for both
countries.
Such criticism is especially pointed because the two lead
authors of the study, Randall Schriver of Armitage and Dan
Blumenthal of AEI, are former senior Taiwan affairs officials:
Schriver was deputy assistant secretary of state, while
Blumenthal was a policy official with the Pentagon's office of
international security.
Both are known to be important supporters of Taiwan in the US
capital.
During a presentation of the study's report, Schriver said that
several members of the "Taiwan Policy Working Group" that
prepared the report were potential members of the next US
president's administration and would likely seek to implement
the report's recommendations if appointed.
The report, Strengthening Freedom in Asia: A
Twenty-First-Century Agenda for the US-Taiwan Partnership, is
one of the most comprehensive independent studies of US-Taiwan
relations undertaken in Washington in recent years.
"Contemporary US-Taiwan relations suffer from neglect and bitter
feelings at the highest level," the 24-page report says. "The
United States and Taiwan currently share no common agenda, thus
allowing the relationship to lurch from crisis to crisis."
"Washington's move backward in its relations with Taiwan are not
only unworthy of a democratic friend, they are also dangerous,"
it says.
The report cites the Bush administration's preoccupation with
Iraq, Iran and North Korea, which has increased US reliance on
China's cooperation in international issues, giving Beijing an
opening to drive a wedge between the US and Taiwan and prompting
the US to lean on Taipei not to do anything that Beijing views
as provocative.
"A US-Taiwan common agenda is needed now more than ever ...
Beijing is using diplomatic isolation and the threat of military
force to pressure Taiwan into an unfavorable settlement, and
Taiwan is reacting by forcing intractable disputes to the front
of the debate. The United States has been reacting by trying to
punish or pressure Taiwan to stand down at the expense of its
own long-term interests. This dynamic is not sustainable," the
report says.
The authors call on the US to relax the restrictions on
high-level bilateral visits and communications in the political
and military spheres and allow both countries' presidents to
speak directly to each other.
They also call for more US arms sales to Taiwan and greater
interoperability between the US and Taiwanese militaries to help
combat a Chinese military action against Taiwan.
Citing the US refusal to sell advanced F-16 fighters to Taiwan,
the report says: "Washington has thus become culpable in an
eroding military balance across the Strait, sacrificing
long-term interests to short-term emotion."
Other recommendations include a free trade agreement between the
two, more US arms sales to Taiwan focusing on better homeland
defense cooperation, anti-submarine warfare, air and missile
defense and disaster and humanitarian aid coordination.
The report urges Taiwan to boost defense spending, implement
economic reforms including the opening of investment
opportunities for Chinese and other foreign firms, promote
Taiwanese industries' technological and market advances in
international economic relationships, export its democratic
model to the rest of the world and use its public health
expertise more effectively on the global scene.
Taiwan should also improve the quality of its official
congressional relations staff in Washington, in view of ebbing
US congressional support for Taiwan in recent years because of
changes to new congressional leaders and staffers with
"diminished knowledge" about Taiwan and China.
The report also wants Taiwan to create a cadre of defense
experts in the Legislative Yuan and boost the professionalism of
the Taiwan military.
The report bemoans China's greater clout with Washington in
recent years over Taiwan policy.
"Washington must begin [improving US-Taiwan ties] by ending PRC
[People's Republic of China] expectations that it can deliver
Taiwan," it says.
Liberty Times
(Source)
2008.02.24 |